
The River, the Town
Farah Ali
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Description
In the rural town in Pakistan where Baadal grows up, children are named like talismans to sustain life and ward off unhappiness. At seventeen, Baadal has come to understand why his parents gave him that name, with hopes that their Big River will one day flow wide again, and their thirst will be quenched after years of drought. But in the final year of his schooling, abundance seems impossibly far away. As his parents' marriage-full of rage, despair, and often violence--reaches a breaking point, the only comfort Baadal can afford is a budding kinship with Meena, a divorced older woman he meets on the banks of the drying river.
Meena has only just escaped her abusive husband, but her resistance to remarry soon gives way to the promise of stability and companionship that Baadal offers. Together, they leave the Town in search of greater fortunes in the City. But even strong-willed, independent Meena finds herself bowed by the strain of Badaal's punishing work schedule, her struggling beauty parlor, and the tension with Baadal's mother, Raheela, who fights for control of her son as she seeks to leave behind a life of disappointments and discover a freedom she's never known.
Told in rotating perspectives spanning from 1966 to 1998, THE RIVER, THE TOWN is an intimate portrait of a family unraveling in the throes of indigence, and a tribute to the wounded love that keeps them tethered to each other. With stark and candid prose, Farah Ali traces one family's fortunes to illuminate the relentless cycle of inequity, juxtaposing the tragic and grueling realities of poverty with the enduring struggle for compassion and humanity.
Product Details
Publisher | Dzanc Books |
Publish Date | October 17, 2023 |
Pages | 216 |
Language | English |
Type | |
EAN/UPC | 9781950539888 |
Dimensions | 8.6 X 5.5 X 0.9 inches | 0.8 pounds |
About the Author
Reviews
"A deep and powerful work of literary climate fiction... Farah Ali's is a fresh voice in fiction, a voice that risks and rewards the reader with a deeper understanding of their own condition. Her scope is global but also deeply personal.... An outstanding addition to what I hope is a long-lasting and prolific career." -Independent Book Review
"Ali looks at her characters and keeps looking, unwilling to run away herself or allow them that luxury, as if looking alone is the only thing that matters. As if an awakening needs to happen in the reader and not the characters of the novel." --World Literature Today
"The River, The
Town shimmers like a clear, blue stream. Farah Ali's debut novel, which is
set in a small town in Pakistan against the backdrop of a debilitating drought,
will force you to rethink everything you ever thought you needed. Ali is a
talent, and where she shines is in her ability to blend the catastrophic with
the everyday. This is a book you'll want to read, but it's one you need to
read, too." --Rachel Beanland, author of The House is On Fire and Florence
Adler Swims Forever
"Told in spare,
lovely prose, The River, The Town, tautly and magnetically juxtaposes
climate-induced poverty with fraught family relationships. Ali's portrayal of
Meena, Baadal and Raheela at different stages of their lives, probing
compassionately into memories, dreams, overheard conversations, will stay with
you long after the last page. A must for any reader interested in the human
impact of climate-induced scarcity and sustained hope." --Chaya Bhuvaneswar,
PEN/ American finalist for White Dancing Elephants: Stories
"The story of
urbanization, the divide between urban and rural, the burning desire to trade
the province for the metropolis, is at the heart of modern South Asia. Farah
Ali takes this story and turns it into a tremendously personal tale of a single
family. The stench of poverty that Farah's characters carry on themselves is
its own animal, sharing space on every page. Farah has expertly crafted
characters whose lives are overrun by economic struggle and climate change,
sketching them in with electrifying details, unwavering compassion, and
impressive clarity. There is none of the romanticization of struggle, no
simplification of precarity, that so often makes its way into South Asian
English-language fiction. The prose is stark and unadorned, but it has burned
itself on my mind, and will do so with other lucky readers as well. This book
is a marvelous achievement." --Dur e Aziz Amna, author of American
Fever
"Farah
Ali's stunning debut illustrates how even the deepest love can be corrupted by
the encroaching devastation of a planet in crisis. An impoverished,
drought-plagued town backdrops a tense family drama between a mother, her son,
and the woman he loves. In this lushly painted world, villagers sleep on the
ground, fight for food, and die from preventable illnesses, yet joy always
manages to break through as does love - desperate, w
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