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Cargando... Home Fire: A Novel (2017 original; edición 2017)por Kamila Shamsie (Autor)
Información de la obraHome Fire por Kamila Shamsie (2017)
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Inscríbete en LibraryThing para averiguar si este libro te gustará. Actualmente no hay Conversaciones sobre este libro. Amid the profusion of modern Iliad and Odyssey retellings (which I love), it was exciting to find a retelling of Antigone (although I have read another recently – [b:The Children of Jocasta|33667103|The Children of Jocasta|Natalie Haynes|https://images.gr-assets.com/books/1488410855s/33667103.jpg|54538432]). I studied the play as an A-level student and was fascinated by it. Shamsie transforms the story considerably by transposing the setting to the early 21st century and splitting the point of view between four main characters. The heart of the play, however, is retained: a tragic family cursed by the sins of the father. In ‘Home Fire’ this sin is abandoning his family in London to become an Islamic fundamentalist fighter. The siblings, Isma, Aneeka, and Parvaiz, are each wounded by this and their lives shaped by their father’s terrible legacy. The fourth point of view character is Eamonn, son of Britain’s Home Secretary. At first I found the narrative relatively slow and gentle, as it followed Isma’s experiences in America. There was nonetheless a sense of creeping dread that grew with each successive narrator. Events gradually built to a fittingly Sophoclean tragic climax. Shamsie evokes the impact of Islamophobia in the UK with vivid conviction, showing how the cruelties of the War on Terror help to perpetuate the very radicalisation it is fighting. Isma, Aneeka, and Parvaiz are all fascinating, convincing characters. Eamonn and his father, although more emotionally distant from the narrative, also convince. I found ‘Home Fire’ moving and thought-provoking. Like Antigone, it attempts no simple answers to the question of how cycles of violence can be broken. ( ) #Around the World #Pakistan This brilliant story by Pakistani author Kamila Shamsie was winner of the Women’s Prize for Fiction in 2017 and long listed for the Booker Prize. The book is based on the Greek tragedy Antigone. Siblings Isma, Aneeka and Parvaiz are British Muslims with family origins in Pakistan. They have grown up together, surviving an absentee jihadi father who was away fighting for years before disappearing, and then the death of their mother. They have also been subject to all the racism and suspicion of local people, governments and security personnel. When her younger twin siblings are grown up and stable, Isma finally feels able to pursue her dreams in the USA. Here she meets Eamonn, son of wealthy British politician Karamat Lone, who has distanced himself from his Muslim roots and takes a hard line or terrorism, security and the need to assimilate. This meeting has far reaching consequences for both families. Parvaiz goes from being an innocent young man campaigning to save his library to meeting a new friend, who takes him under his wing, to radicalise him and take him to Syria to work for ISIS. As their lives are increasingly turned upside down the siblings all pull in different directions with dramatic outcomes. I really enjoyed the book, it challenges you to think and presents so many aspects, in particular of life as a British Muslim. It presents this from multiple perspectives, looking at the hardship and at times fear of living as a Muslim in the West, facing constant, unfairly directed scrutiny and criticism. It examines how terrorist recruiting and radicalisation occurs, and the conditions that may lead to British youth being subject to this. It also examines the hypocrisy within the system and the dubious nature of political decisions around race and religion. The characters were complex, likeable and captivating. I could not put this book down and would highly recommend it. 5 stars. Once I had worked out where I was and who was speaking, I found Home Fire by Kamila Shamsie to be a gripping tale and flew through it. It’s a very British book, due, in part, to a pervasively underlying sense of class polemic. I liked the way the author structured the story through the different perspectives of each of the main characters but she had a most annoying habit of trying to create suspense by referring to things the reader was yet to find out about. This meant I became disorientated several times and had to re-read to find out who was talking about what. There are moments when Shamsie soars, for example,
The Antigone theme was not laboured and lent the book a depth that it really didn’t need. At first I was a bit underwhelmed with this book; I found it to be a bit slow and simple, especially because of the way the chapters were set up (each character had their own part) but as I progressed, I was blown away. The pacing of the last third of the book was really extraordinary and I thought that the use of the articles, closed captions, and various displays of social media was a perfect way to modernize the classic Antigone. sin reseñas | añadir una reseña
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Isma is finally free: after years taking care of her twin brothers since her mother's death, her dream of studying in the United States has come true. But she can't stop worrying about her sister Aneeka, as beautiful as she is stubborn; her brother Parvaiz, who has made her worst nightmare come true and left London to join ISIS; and her father, an infamous jihadist. Then Eamonn, the privileged son of a powerful British politician, appears in her life, and soon the fates of both families becomes inextricably, terribly linked. Home Fire deals with topical themes of civil disobedience, loyalty, and legality in its quest to respond to the question, What would you be willing to sacrifice for love? Isma es libre al fin. Después de pasarse años cuidando de sus hermanos gemelos, tras de la muerte de su madre, ha conseguido su sueño: estudiar en Estados Unidos. Pero no puede dejar de preocuparse de su hermana, Aneeka, tan bella como tozuda o de su hermano Parvaiz, que ha acabado por convertirse en su peor pesadilla al dejar Londres para formar parte de ISIS tal y como hizo su padre, un yihadista infame. Es entonces cuando Eamonn, un joven privilegiado y atractivo, hijo de un poderoso político británico-musulmán, aparece. Los destinos de ambas familias se entrelazarán irremediablemente, con nudos que preceden a la tragedia. Los desterrados, atiende a temas de actualidad: desobediencia civil, fidelidad y legalidad. Y con todo ello intenta responder a una pregunta: ¿Qué sacrificios estarías dispuesto a hacer en nombre del amor? No se han encontrado descripciones de biblioteca. |
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Google Books — Cargando... GénerosSistema Decimal Melvil (DDC)823.914Literature English English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999Clasificación de la Biblioteca del CongresoValoraciónPromedio:
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