Originally published Friday, April 4, 2008 at 12:00 AM
Lahiri treads familiar waters "Unaccustomed Earth"
Divided into two sections, "Unaccustomed Earth" by Jhumpa Lahiri takes its title from Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Custom House." An epigraph espouses the need for successive generations to "strike their roots into unaccustomed earth."
Special to The Seattle Times
Jhumpa Lahiri
The author will read from "Unaccustomed Earth"at 7 p.m. April 14 in the Microsoft Auditorium
of the main branch of the Seattle Public Library.
Free (206-386-4636; www.spl.org).
"Unaccustomed Earth"
by Jhumpa Lahiri
Knopf, 331 pp., $25
Jhumpa Lahiri perfected the short-story form in her 2000 Pulitzer Prize-winning debut collection, "The Interpreter of Maladies." That remarkable group of narratives explored her key theme of expatriate Bengali parents dealing with children who have adapted to American ways. She continued in a similar vein with her novel "The Namesake." The eight adept stories in "Unaccustomed Earth" carry on in the same tradition.
Divided into two sections, the book takes its title from Nathaniel Hawthorne's "The Custom House." An epigraph espouses the need for successive generations to "strike their roots into unaccustomed earth."
No where is this clearer than in the title story, which opens Part 1. Thirty-eight-year-old Ruma faces a series of challenges when she moves from Brooklyn's Park Slope to the Seattle area's Eastside. Despite a picture-window view of Lake Washington and the "snowy peaks" of the Olympics, a definitive unhappiness permeates Ruma's supposedly charmed life.
Newly pregnant with a second child, Ruma hosts her 70-year-old widower father (visiting for a week from Pennsylvania). She wonders if she has an obligation to invite him to move in with her family, a husband who is rarely home and a 3-year-old son. Unbeknownst to Ruma, her father harbors a secret about his current lifestyle.
Four more stories in Part 1 introduce other disconsolate characters. "Hell-Heaven," set in the Boston/Cambridge area, focuses on a Bengali graduate student who, befriended by the narrator's family, triggers what could be a life-altering event for everyone concerned. In "A Choice of Accommodations," a couple confronts the renewal of their commitments when they return to a boarding school for a friend's wedding. A sister and an alcoholic brother move to the edge of tragedy in "Only Goodness." A student studying for his doctoral exams gets uncomfortably involved in a romantic triangle in "Nobody's Business."
Part 2 of the collection contains three linked stories: "Once In A Lifetime," "Year's End" and "Going Ashore" follow the lives of Hema and Kaushuk, friends from childhood. Their paths cross in fatefully dark ways. In 1974, 6-year-old Hema's crush on 9-year-old Kaushuk is disrupted when his family moves to India. When Kaushuk's family returns seven years later, adolescent Hema is still deeply attracted to the older teenager. In the closing story, the couple unexpectedly reunite in Rome. Hema is a successful academic; Kaushuk, an internationally known photojournalist. Their fates ultimately become overshadowed by a natural catastrophe they could not foresee.
Though "Unaccustomed Earth" is not as stunning as "The Interpreter of Maladies" (some stories are overlong; others dwell on obvious thematic conflicts), it's always hard to improve on perfection.
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
Local books | A new Jance thriller, Starbucks' corporate history and an orphan's tale
Lit Life: National recognition for Seattle's readergirlz online book community
The Ultimate Holiday Cookbook Social at Palace Ballroom
Journalist and author Amy Goodman in Seattle
Book review: "Molly Ivins: A Rebel Life:" Fearless, funny and opinionated

New Beginnings Christian Fellowship
Coming in Sunday's Pacific Northwest Magazine: Pastor Braxton's mission is to preach a message that appeals to everyone.
general classifieds
Garage & estate salesFurniture & home furnishings
Sporting goods
just listed
Bed - $400
Bedroom set - $850
Christmas Centerpiece - $12
More listings
POST A FREE LISTING
shopping
events for Tuesday, Nov. 24
- Local Children's Brands Preholiday Sale
- Kibbn Anniversary Sale
- Lizzie's Faves Sale at Lizzie Parker Designs
- Seattle Premium Outlets Midnight Madness Sale...
editors' picks
- Local jewelry designers
- Pioneer Square shopping
- Independent bookstores
- Vintage, consignment and used clothing
- Illegal workers quietly let go
- Sprouts, raw fish on attorney's 'do not eat' list
- Jerry Brewer | Jerry Brewer: Seahawks can't lean on the Hutch Crutch now
- Woman stabbed by stranger in North Seattle
- Tattoos at Mill Creek church pierce skin, soul
- UW, WSU once again meet to see who's worse
- Food-safety lawyer's wish: Put me out of business
- Husky Football Blog | Ranking the Pac
- Vikings easily beat the Seahawks
- Tugboat sinks at Seattle waterfront pier
- Illegal workers quietly let go
424 - Climate change speeds up since 1997 Kyoto accord
224 - Bellevue residents blast new bikini espresso stand
178 - New Husky recruit: Enes Kanter
109 - Washington State coach Paul Wulff says he's excited about Cougars' future
108 - Big demand, grim outlook for state Basic Health Plan
104 - Next Seahawks GM should be Mike Holmgren
102 - Seattle woman charged with knife attack on boyfriend's ex
93 - Middleton says Huskies "plan on scoring at least 50 points'' Saturday
87 - Jose Lopez appears to be on his way out
76
- Sprouts, raw fish on attorney's 'do not eat' list
- Tattoos at Mill Creek church pierce skin, soul
- Food-safety lawyer's wish: Put me out of business
- Illegal workers quietly let go
- Architects, chefs find 'kid' within to build Gingerbread Village
- Nicole Brodeur | Homeless woman bent on giving
- Rediscovering Moab, 'the most beautiful place on Earth'
- UW, WSU once again meet to see who's worse
- Hutch gets $10M from Bezos family for immunotherapy research
- Elton John & Billy Joel reschedule Seattle concerts




