Showing posts with label tokyo cancelled. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tokyo cancelled. Show all posts

Friday, January 7, 2011

Tokyo Cancelled by Rana Dasgupta

(Photo taken from Goodreads)

Title:  Tokyo Cancelled
Author:  Rana Dasgupta
Publisher:  Black Cat
Language: English
Format:  Paperback
Pages:  400 pages
ISBN-10:  0802170099
ISBN-13:  978-0802170095
Source:  Purchased, Booksale














Stories within a story, this book featured 13 stories as told by 13 stranded travelers when their flight to Tokyo was canceled due to an epic snowstorm.  These tourists, looking to pass the time and recognizing the need for companionship and understanding that they need to get along with each other, if only for a few hours until their flight resumes, tells stories to each other as a means of entertainment.  

The stories and the order in which they were told are as follows:

The Tailor
The Memory Editor
The Billionaire's Sleep
The House of the Frankfurt Mapmaker
The Store on Madison Avenue
The Flyover
The Speed Bump
The Doll
The Rendezvous in Istanbul
The Changeling
The Bargain in the Dungeon
The Lucky Ear Cleaner
The Recycler of Dreams

The stories remind me of how children would make stories on their own, which starts very interesting then changes to the odd and quirky as it progresses, to something downright impossible.  Outrageously out of this world, sometimes vague and ambiguous, sometimes schizophrenic.  The reader, depending upon his/her preference, would either be amazed at the work of pure imagination and ingenuity of the author to have written such stories, or would feel lost amidst the seemingly improbable to the downright grotesque writing.  For my part, this is a go-to book for weirdly gripping tales - tall tales for the adult readers, told and read for the sake of telling and reading a story.

The first few stories were interesting, the writing and language well-used and very intelligible.  However, I can't help but think that digression has been present on almost all stories, focus lost on the main issues of the plot and the characters and instead the flow shifts directions into the bizarre.  Not just once did I get grossed out on some scenes, and although they could have been very dramatic and imaginative, I can't help thinking that most were just an amalgamation of the classic fairy tales set in an ultra-modern setting, with strange and disturbing twists, and with only moral lessons revealed.

I read in some reviews that this book compares to Chaucer's Canterbury Tales or to the Arabian Nights, and although some stories do make some sense, comparing it to the above classics is too much.  I remembered studying those stories in school and I've always been so fascinated with them.  They teach a lot of virtues and the adventures were vividly and thoughtfully written.  The stories in Tokyo Cancelled on the other hand, I could not imagine doing a paper on, let alone reading it in class. 

Overall, I would reiterate what I said above:  The stories within this book are, in my opinion, as good as short stories could go.  A reader may find him/herself swimming in an ocean of words and loving every minute of it, or getting drowned with bizarre and conflicting storylines.  It all depends upon how much his/her imagination can take and how much he/she can allow to get in his/her head.


Thursday, January 6, 2011

Third Sentence Thursday

Third Sentence Thursday

Third Sentence Thursday is a weekly meme hosted by Sniffly Kitty's Mostly Books for treating third sentences with the dignity they deserve!

This week's theme is Weirdest Third Sentence!

1) Take the book you are reading now and post the third sentence
2) Review this sentence anyway you want (funny and silly reviews encouraged)
3) Post a link to your sentence here or if you don't have a blog, just post it in the comments!
4) Prepare for next week's theme: TBA

My Third Sentence for this week is from Tokyo Cancelled by Rana Dasgupta:




"I seek a word.  A word for a friend of mine who is dying.  He needs it to die in piece."

 -page 277, tenth story, The Changeling from Tokyo Cancelled by Rana Dasgupta


 

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Teaser Tuesday


Teaser Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by MizB at Should Be Reading. Anyone can play along! Just do the following:

* Grab your current read
* Open to a random page
* Share two "teaser" sentences from that page
* BE CAREFUL NOT TO INCLUDE SPOILERS! You don't want to ruin the book for others!
* Share the title and author so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR lists if they like your teasers!

My Teaser:

The book I'm reading today, Tokyo Cancelled by Rana Dasgupta is a collection of 13 stories that a group of travelers tell while stranded in an airport.


 "Has anyone seen my cat?" she continued anxiously.
"You don't need your cat. I'm here with you now."

-page 193 the eighth story, The Doll, from Tokyo Cancelled by Rana Dasgupta