All is BurningIn these stories Jean Arasanayagam brings us voices that are not normally heard: those of anonymous men and women searching for order and reason in the midst of a ruthless civil war. While many succumb to the horror of their times, there are others who discover in themselves unexpected reserves that will help them survive. Thus a young Sinhala man turns his back on an aimless upper-class existence and joins a group of Tamil refugees smuggling themselves into Germany; a woman goes out alone to see the scene of a carnage to try and find her daughter's lover among the dead and dying; a maid returns from the rich desert city of Doha to the green half-jungle of her village in northern Sri Lanka and rediscovers happiness despite the uncertain future...In addition to stories about the effects of war and violence, this collection also explores aspects of ethnicity and individual choice in a multicultural society. All is Burning is truth-telling at its poignant best. 'Jean Arasanayagam's writing contains some of the most powerful and truthful stories to come out of Sri Lanka...She is a wonderful writer and should be read everywhere.' 'Jean Arasanayagam is one of the most significant voices writing in Sri Lanka today. Her fiction is deeply political in the very best sense of the word, concerned as it is with personal politics of post-colonial identity. Her luminous prose enables her to go straight to the core of her characters' social and personal dilemmas.' --Professor John Thieme, Department of English, The University of Hull |
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Page 35
... felt I could read their minds : ' He is one them . How did he escape ? These terrorists are elusive . He must have slipped out of our hands . They vanish , then they appear . They lay mines . They take sniper shots at our men . How did ...
... felt I could read their minds : ' He is one them . How did he escape ? These terrorists are elusive . He must have slipped out of our hands . They vanish , then they appear . They lay mines . They take sniper shots at our men . How did ...
Page 161
... felt pressurized if anyone offered her food , even an apple . Lam and Marcia , with their different cultures , felt it was alien to eat alone . Sheila , the English girl , often shared their food . But Joyce felt that all of them could ...
... felt pressurized if anyone offered her food , even an apple . Lam and Marcia , with their different cultures , felt it was alien to eat alone . Sheila , the English girl , often shared their food . But Joyce felt that all of them could ...
Page 231
... felt that she might move too far away from a world that she might never return to . But here , in this country , she ... felt her strength ebbing away ; a traveller at the crossroads , not knowing which route to take . For her the rank ...
... felt that she might move too far away from a world that she might never return to . But here , in this country , she ... felt her strength ebbing away ; a traveller at the crossroads , not knowing which route to take . For her the rank ...
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Common terms and phrases
apples arrack asked asylum seekers Aunty Bangalore beautiful belonged Bhikkus birds blue body brother burning Camille chiffonier clothes coconut Colombo colour crowds cut-pieces dark daughter death Dewa Domingos door dukkha everything eyes face father fear feel felt flesh flowers friends fruit garden girl gold grass green guerrillas hair hands husband Janine Jasmine journey jungle Kandy knew leave light lives look Lydia Madurai Marcia marriage married Meena Melwyn mind mother Mungo Nanna never night once past pavement perhaps Potter wasps prawn pray Radha road round rupees sambara saree sarong says Serena Shariff shirt silent silk Sinhala sister skin sleep Sometimes stood streets Sulo talk temple things thought trees trishaw veena veshti village voices waiting walk walls watch woman women young