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The Pathless Sky

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In The Pathless Sky, Chaitali Sen conjures a world in which a nation's political turmoil, its secret history and growing social unrest turn life into a fragile and capricious thing and love into a necessary refuge to be defended at all cost. A world not unlike the one we live in.

John, a hapless young student with a potentially brilliant academic career ahead of him, and Mariam, a shy, preternaturally perceptive woman from the north, meet and fall in love in college. Their early careers, their seemingly mismatched natures, and the alarming changes occurring in their country conspire to keep them apart for years. But a day comes when, across a great distance, both realize that they have always loved each other.

During the intervening years, however, the troubles in their country have reached a critical impasse. Government crimes have been white washed, personal liberty is deeply compromised, a resistance movement has emerged from the underground to take the fight for freedom to the streets, and the government militia employs increasingly draconian measures in an attempt to maintain control. When Mariam is implicated in the latest spell of anti-government actions and arrested without appeal, the consequences of her and John's love will prove potentially dire for both.

The Pathless Sky is a haunting and moving novel for readers of Michael Ondaatje's The English Patient, Jhumpa Lahiri's The Lowland, and the novels of Amitav Ghosh. Sen's lyrical language and fluid storytelling mirror the rhythms of political struggle itself. John and Mariam are unforgettable characters, troubled lovers who struggle to find a space for the finest human emotions in a place that is determined to abolish them.
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    • Kirkus

      August 15, 2015
      Reeling from personal tragedy, a young couple struggles to navigate political violence in their unnamed homeland and rebuild their marriage. "It mattered to him that he woke up alone," Sen's debut novel begins. John is upset and angry to find his wife, Mariam, once again asleep on the floor of the empty nursery that was supposed to house their stillborn baby daughter. Mariam's ongoing pain is, to John, a personal affront that is splitting their marriage apart. But when the militia storms their workplace and Mariam is kidnapped, John's only concern is for her safety. This present-day drama then flashes back to the story of young John and Mariam at university-their chance meeting on a bridge, growing connection, and John's regretted detour into a relationship with Mariam's friend Nina. Mariam and John soon marry and move back to his hometown. Life for the newlyweds moves along smoothly as John finishes his dissertation and advances in his career-complicated only by the denial of Mariam's passport in the middle of the growing violence of the military state. Desperate to travel overseas, John decides to purchase forged papers for the family. But the loss of their newborn baby devastates Mariam; John, feeling abandoned, begins to think he and Mariam should separate. Here, the novel's past catches up to the present and jumps back into the story of Mariam's disappearance. This debut novel is a searingly vivid portrayal of the depths of human emotions-from the first glow of young love to the deeper strength of middle-aged commitment. Although the flashback structure-in which the bulk of the novel occurs in the past-leaves the reader hungry for the present-tense storyline of Mariam's kidnapping, this device does create a suspenseful mystery which haunts the narrative. A poignant and sophisticated work couched in lyrical, effervescent prose.

      COPYRIGHT(2015) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2015

      Brilliant yet somewhat feckless John Merchant meets Mariam at college, and their on-again, off-again affair unfolds against the backdrop of political and military violence in their unnamed country. Mariam is from the north, marginalized and scorned, and John tries to protect her from news of government bombings there, even as he becomes momentarily involved with her roommate. The narrative carries this star-crossed couple from first kiss and breakup to reunion, marriage, a lost child, and student protests at the college where they work that entrap Mariam and leave John struggling to save more than their marriage. VERDICT The paralleling of political and personal tensions makes this well-written if longish debut particularly effective; readers who like big-picture novels will enjoy.

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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