The Assassins Song, M.G. Vassanji
The Assassins Song, M.G. Vassanji
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The Assassin's Song

Author: M.G. Vassanji

Narrator: Firdous Bamji

Unabridged: 14 hr 10 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Recorded Books

Published: 05/15/2009


Synopsis

The magnificent new novel from the award-winning author of The In-Between World of Vikram Lall (“This beautiful novel . . . is proof that fictional truth can illuminate an epoch in history like nothing else”—The Boston Globe).

In the aftermath of the brutal violence that gripped western India in 2002, Karsan Dargawalla, heir to Pirbaag—the shrine of a mysterious, medieval sufi—begins to tell the story of his family and the shrine now destroyed. His tale opens in the 1960s: young Karsan is next in line after his father to assume lordship of the Shrine of the Wanderer, and take his place as a representative of God to the multitudes who come there. But he longs to be “just ordinary”—to play cricket and be part of the exciting world he reads about in the stacks of newspapers a truck driver brings him from all across India. And when, to his utter amazement, he is accepted at Harvard, he can’t resist the opportunity to go finally “into the beating heart of the world.”

Despite his father’s epistolary attempts to keep Karsan close to traditional ways, the excitements and discoveries of his new existence in America soon prove more compelling, and after a bitter quarrel, he abdicates his successorship to the ancient throne. Yet even as he succeeds in his “ordinary” life—marrying and having a son (his own “child-god”), becoming a professor in suburban British Columbia—his heritage haunts him in unexpected ways. After tragedy strikes, both in Canada and in Pirbaag, he is drawn back across thirty years of separation and silence to discover what, if anything, is left for him in India.

A story of grand historical sweep and intricate personal drama, a stunning evocation of the physical and emotional landscape of a man caught between the ancient and the modern, between legacy and discovery, between the most daunting filial obligation and the most undeniable personal yearning—The Assassin’s Song is a heartbreaking ballad of a life irrevocably changed.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Kara on March 25, 2009

On the back cover of my edition, there's a blurb from The Globe and Mail that calls the book "timeless." That is the most accurate single-word evaluation of The Assassin's Song. Once you've plunged into the book and read a couple of chapters, you immediately get that sense of timelessness. M. G. Vass......more

Goodreads review by Arachne8x on February 07, 2010

I'm giving this a solid 3 because I found it pretty engaging. On the other hand, I questioned several times why I was reading it. Because while I was hooked, I wasn't really enjoying it. The book isn't a novel so much as a fictional biography, and the main character has a pretty bizarre life. He's an......more

Goodreads review by Supriya on July 23, 2015

I actually started reading this book by accident. A friend was giving away old books and this was one of them. The title suggested a murder mystery and so i picked it up. Turns out, its a beautiful story with history, religion, family drama and great story telling. What it isn't is a murder mystery......more

Goodreads review by Caroline on March 19, 2021

Reading it, I felt, "not his best". But then, afterwards, I feel it was ...lovely. How to describe the 20th-21st century experiences of someone who is raised to be the avatar of a 13th century maybe-god? The idea of the richness of religions and traditions that would allow and support the emergence an......more

Goodreads review by Janet on September 09, 2018

A story that got better as the book went on. The reader can sympathize with the boy whose father expects him to follow his predestined role as guru and avatar to the people who visit the shrine. Vassanji's writing is poetic, but he includes an overwhelming number of references to Indian places, even......more