Ratings16
Average rating3.3
Set in Kolkata, India, the novel tells the story of its central character Jivan, a woman who witnesses a terrorist attack on an Indian train while it is stopped in a station.The woman posts to Facebook the next day, drawing the attention of police who arrest her on suspicion of committing the terrorist attack herself. Following the accusation, her fate hinges upon her former gym teacher, PT Sir, who has become a politician in an Indian right-wing party, and on a hijra actress named Lovely.
Reviews with the most likes.
Would not recommend this book. It is riddled with stereotypes and misrepresentations. The writing style was weird as well, nobody in India who is learning English speaks the way Lovely does. It sounds just like the cliched Indian character from an American sitcom. So many aspects of this have made me angry. It's the Slumdog Millionaire of books IMO.
4.5
(I listen to this book)
Lovely makes this story perfect. Megha created a beautiful story in which all the characters mix in between, and get us to know how dreams and expectations are a common game between individual and community. I could feel the hope (and hopelessness) of each character. The audiobook version is narrated by different authors, making it involving and dynamic.
If there exists a love letter to India, this would be the opposite. A Burning follows 3 characters whose lives are intertwined, dealing with the grittiest and worst aspects of Indian society.
There are extremely gripping and harrowing events in this book that leave you pitying the characters instead of rooting for them. All three characters aim to work their way up in social class, only to be battered down again and again by the system if they don't get extremely lucky or cheat it somehow.
I acclimated to the writing style, and the use of different tenses helped separate the voices of the 3 narrators. However, the writing style didn't lend itself well to the story or help me envision the characters better. It just ends up being a bit annoying to read, and limits the nuance of each character.
Overall, it was an entertaining (albeit horrifying) read that paints the Indian government and society in a single dark stroke.