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Review: Exit West, Mohsin Hamid

Housekeeping: I’m going to start including a very brief description of the book with each review. I hesitated to do this at first because I hate reading reviews that tell me about the book. I’m looking for the reviewer’s opinion; if I want to know what the book contains, I’ll read the back cover copy (BCC) or, even better, the book! Anyway, I decided to include a short description so as to give you some context for my review. Where the BCC is good, I’ll use that, but if I find it to be misleading, I’ll write a couple sentences myself. 🙂

From the back cover copy: In a country on the brink of civil war, Nadia and Saeed meet. They embark on a furtive love affair, and are soon cloistered in a premature intimacy by the unrest roiling their city. When the conflict explodes, they begin to hear whispers about doors that can whisk people far away. As the violence escalates, Nadia and Saeed decide that they no longer have a choice. Leaving their homeland and their old lives behind, they find a door and step through. Exit West follows them as they emerge into an alien and uncertain future, struggling to hold on to each other, to their past, to the very sense of who they are.

img_4816TL;DR, spoiler-free review: Heartbreaking, magical, and realistic. Mohsin Hamid writes in a lyrical, meandering sort of way that never wastes a word. You’ll read it quickly, and read it you absolutely should.

You’re-verbose-and-I-like-it review: Exit West is full of the kind of tension that makes you desperate to turn pages. It’s not overbearing, just a sort of uncomfortable-ness of which you aren’t fully aware. It’s similar to when you hear a weird noise in your home and listen really hard but don’t notice you’re holding your breath until you inhale. Readers are focused on the budding relationship between Nadia and Saeed but they are never allowed to forget about the developing military conflict. Readers are intent on Nadia and Saeed escaping their war-torn country, but reminded that these two people are held together by circumstance as much as their feelings for each other. It was this underlying tension that drove me through the book so quickly, not necessarily demanding a happy ending, but hoping that these characters can, at last, find comfort and peace.

As I’ve said already, Hamid’s writing style is meandering but not verbose. Consider the following, which is actually only the second half of the sentence:

…in a gesture so beautiful that Saeed was filled with love, and reminded of his parents, for whom he suddenly felt such gratitude, and a desire for peace, that peace should come for them all, for everyone, for everything, for we are so fragile, and so beautiful, and surely conflicts could be healed if I others had experiences like this, and then he regarded Nadia and saw that she was regarding him and her eyes were like worlds.

Even when repetitive, there is no instance where paring down the word count is desirable. These long sentences work really well to fold the reader into the emotions of the characters.

When I first read the BCC for Exit West, I thought the doors it referred to were metaphorical; I still imagined their emigration process would be practical (ie. a ship if they escaped by sea, or on foot if they escaped over land). You quickly learn that these are random, ordinary doorways that people walk through and end up somewhere else on Earth. I found it interesting that Hamid did not include the actual act of emigrating. This forces the reader to focus exclusively on what happens when the travelers arrive. Leaving is difficult, travelling can be perilous, but, for Nadia and Saeed, what is important is what they must do next to be safe.

Exit West was not at all what I was expecting, in style and plot, in pacing and character development, and in how it made me feel. It’s a quick read but it’s the sort of book that stays with you long after you finish the last page.

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Week 5: Red Clocks, Exit West, The Boat People

Image displays a wooden bookshelf containing the ever-growing To Be Read piles of books. In the foreground are three books with their covers facing out: Red Clocks (a red cover with overlapping red and purple diamond shapes behind white text), Exit West (a deep blue cover with light blue text; the letters have the uneven texture of something painted with a rough brush), and The Boat People (a predominantly light blue cover, depicting large waves with the title floating on them and a small red boat against a sunrise in the top left corner).

I refuse to admit defeat but this three books a week business is kicking my ass. Last week was pretty busy for me though so I’m hoping this week, which sees nothing more exciting than the crochet class I’m taking with my mother, will be more successful. I didn’t manage to finish The Power of Habit last week and while I’m surely going to continue listening to it while I complete my crochet homework, I’m going to turn my attention to three new books.

Red Clocks, Leni Zumas: I’m ever the sucker for a good cover! This book’s back cover copy asks the question, “what is a woman for?” It takes place in an future where abortion is illegal and in vitro fertilization is banned. The copy compares it to The Handmaid’s Tale which I really enjoyed so here’s hoping it has a better ending than anything Atwood herself as written (tangent: I hate Atwood’s endings. I almost always love the book but the end feels so rushed to me, as if she got bored and wanted to move on to something else. So frustrating).

Exit West, Mohsin Hamid: Fun story: I have a friend who is a very practical gift-giver. He will only get you something that you will actually use. Even if it’s totally superfluous, he’ll get it, but it has to have a function. He knows exactly how bad my book shopping addiction is and he also knows that I haven’t read even half the books I own, so when he asked what I wanted for Christmas, and I said books, he said, “hahahahaha NO.” I promised that the book would go into immediate rotation for the blog, skipping past all others, and he finally agreed. I gave him a list of a few to choose from and so I present to you, the Adam-approved selection, which will likely be the only mandatory reading on my book list. 😀

The Boat People, Sharon Bala: This book is on the Canada Reads 2018 longlist and, while I’m waiting to order the shortlist (it’s being announced tomorrow!!), I didn’t want to wait for this one. Whether it makes the shortlist or not, I’m using it to get ready for Canada Reads, which I always want to participate in but then don’t read fast enough and forget when the debates are. Anyway, this book is about a father and son who are refugees from Sri Lanka landing in British Columbia. Instead of asylum, they find themselves imprisoned as government officials suspect terrorists were aboard their ship. I chose this book as part of my desire to expand my reading selection to perspectives I have not read before.

Housekeeping: I want to start paying attention to where I hear about books. When I sit down to write, I’m like, “duuuhhhhhh…. Instagram told me too?” This might sound strange but I’m not a big browser. I don’t trust random books on the shelves or in the “you might also like this” recommendations on Indigo/Amazon. I need a trusted source to say, “Hey, here’s a 35 dollar shredded and bound tree, you should take this home.” What I’m saying is, I want to cite my sources so you know that I’ve properly vetted this recommendation and it’s not some sloppy algorithm spitting out nonsense. 🙂

More housekeeping: I finally got my social media connected here (buttons on the right side of the page) so come say hello on Twitter or Instagram! I think I’m funny there too 🙂

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