Immagine dell'autore.

Ingrid Persaud

Autore di Love After Love

3 opere 247 membri 10 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Comprende il nome: ingrid persaud

Opere di Ingrid Persaud

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Sesso
female
Nazionalità
Trinidad and Tobago
Nazione (per mappa)
Trinidad and Tobago

Utenti

Recensioni

Boysie Singh is a bad man but one that women love. His childhood sweetheart loves him and bears his child but he lives with Popo, an ex-prostitute. When he meets Doris she sees a way into society but she needs to smarten him up. Each woman thinks she can control Boysie Singh and each is destined to suffer before making her escape.
This is quite a slow-burner of a novel. It is written in a Trinidadian patois and it does help to have a little understanding of Panjabi as well, however the language is lyrical and the story so compelling that the reader is hooked. Boysie is a very unlikable character but is based on those 'bad boys' that the girls can't keep away from and the setting in 1950s Trinidad is evocative and vibrant.… (altro)
 
Segnalato
pluckedhighbrow | May 4, 2024 |
I paid this book the ultimate compliment of rationing the amount of time I spent reading it as I didn't want it to finish. This will be one of my books of 2021.

Set among the Indian community of Trinidad, there's Betty, lone parent to Solo after the death of her violent husband. There's lodger Mr. Chetan: friend to everyone but with secrets that are hard to live with. And there's Solo himself, who discovers how his father died, and draws painful conclusions. The narrative swings between these three characters over the years in which the story plays out. Extraordinary, ordinary lives, often steeped in loneliness. Here are three characters looking for love, for understanding, for acceptance. Written in lilting, poetic Trinidadian patois, this is a powerful, absorbing and compelling story… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Margaret09 | 8 altre recensioni | Apr 15, 2024 |
Ugh. What a bummer. Initially I was enjoying this book due to Persaud's choice of writing it in Trini Creole. It felt authentic and certainly helped to bring the characters to life. Her descriptions of traditional foods and the community also helped to further immerse me in the story. And that's where the praise ends.

The description for this book in Goodreads quotes two authors one calling it "An electrifying novel..." and another mentioning "electrifying prose" and for the life of me I can't figure out if these reviews were perhaps written by relatives. Maybe advance reading copies were sent out with those joy buzzers attached because this book, when read on a kindle, is about as electrifying as an overripe banana.

The story goes pretty much nowhere for the whole book. We follow Betty, a doting and perhaps smothering single mother, her son Solo, an obnoxiously selfish boy and then man, and Mr Chetan a closeted gay man who boards with them. Over the years they become a family of sorts until a "shock revelation" causes Solo to flee to New York City. We continue to follow these three through the years (with individual chapters devoted to the first person musings of each) for no apparent reason. None of them do much more than luxuriate in their own self-pity although they surprisingly do so in different ways. Despite attempting to tackle some timely and important issues, the protagonists never seem to grow or learn. It's beyond frustrating... where's the gd arc?!

I was suspicious of the book when it was suggested for a book group assuming from the name that it would be a weepy romance novel (I mean, what an awful name!). When I read the description, though, it sounded like so much more. I was wrong. I wanted to like this novel and it had redeeming qualities in the language it used and it's ability to transport me to the Caribbean island for moments. In the end, though, I found the writing downright wearisome and the lack of any real storyline or character development weighed the novel down so heavily that it never rose above the mundane. Exhausting.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
Jess.Stetson | 8 altre recensioni | Apr 4, 2023 |
This is a story about accepting who you are, and trusting the people who love you to do the same. Betty's deceased husband was abusive, and she is estranged from her son who moves away as soon as he finishes high school. Her best friend, Mr. Chetan, is gay in a community where homophobia is the norm, including physical violence against gay men.

It took me a while to get into this book, but it was worth the effort. I know nothing about Trinidad's culture and there is a lot of dialect. It took a long time to read the first 20 pages.....but I'm glad I stuck with it. There is a lot going on in this book. I identified with Betty. There were some really touching moments, some humour. The more I reflect on the characters, the more I like the book.… (altro)
½
 
Segnalato
LynnB | 8 altre recensioni | Nov 16, 2021 |

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Statistiche

Opere
3
Utenti
247
Popolarità
#92,310
Voto
3.9
Recensioni
10
ISBN
14
Lingue
1

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