Cinnamon Gardens

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Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2000 - Fiction - 360 pages
Set among the upper classes in the gracious, repressive and complex world of 1920s Ceylon (Sri Lanka), this evocative novel tells the story of two people who must determine if it is possible to pursue personal happiness without compromising the happiness of others. A young teacher, Annalukshmi, whose splintered family attempts to arrange an appropriate marriage for her, must decide whether the independence she craves will doom her to a life without love and companionship. It is also the story of Balendran who, respectably married, must suppress-or confront-the secret desires for men that threaten to throw his life into chaos. With sensuous atmosphere and vivid prose, this masterfully plotted novel re-creates a world where a beautiful veneer of fragrant gardens and manners hides social, personal, and political issues still relevant today.

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Contents

1
3
2
22
3
38
4
48
5
76
6
93
7
104
8
121
Book Two
207
16
209
17
225
18
241
19
263
20
277
21
292
22
302

9
130
10
143
11
155
12
164
13
175
14
183
15
193
23
312
24
323
25
333
26
347
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
355
READING GROUP GUIDE
359
Copyright

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About the author (2000)

Shyam Selvadurai is a novelist and writer for television. He was born in Colombo, Sri Lanka, in 1965. Selvadurai earned a B.F.A. in creative writing from York University. Selvadurai has written for the Canadian television shows Many Voices and Inside Voices and contributed to several journals and anthologies. Selvadurai's first novel, Funny Boy, was nominated for the Giller Prize and received the W.H. Smith/Books in Canada First Novel Award. It also earned the Lambda Literary Award for Best Gay Men's Fiction.

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