The twice-born Life and death on the Ganges

Aatish Taseer, 1980-

Book - 2019

"A portrait of the collision between tradition and modernity in India, as told through the lives of the Brahmins in the holy city of Benares"--

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  • 1. Foreigners in Their Own Land
  • Summer
  • 2. The Color-Filled Eleventh
  • 3. The Hour of Juncture
  • 4. The Rape and the Seduction
  • 5. The Conqueror of Destiny
  • 6. The Modern Traditionalist
  • Winter
  • 7. The Revolutionary Brahmin
  • 8. The Community of Death
  • 9. The Isle of Rough Magic
  • 10. The Dharma of Place
  • 11. The Protection of the Seed
Review by New York Times Review

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Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [July 11, 2019]
Review by Booklist Review

A wish to learn Sanskrit and study the twice-born, the Brahmins at the highest perch of the Hindu pecking order, inspired Taseer (The Way Things Were, 2016) to visit the ancient Indian city of Benares (official name: Varanasi) on the banks of the holy Ganges River. A gay man and the son of a Muslim Pakistani politician and an illustrious Sikh Indian author, Taseer calls New York City home. By being familiar with Benares while also being a spectator on the sidelines, he proves to be adept at chronicling the city's various fractured selves. Although the book's nebulous goals (is it about Brahmins, the first Modi election, the clash between modernity and tradition, or all of the above?) threaten to muddy the narrative, the city nevertheless takes shape through profiles of Brahmins who share their views of the cultural and political landscape. Benares is especially sacred to Hindus as a place to make peace with death. Curiously, it is this aspect of the city that really comes to life in this meandering but engaging account.--Poornima Apte Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Hindus' struggle to reconcile modern life with age-old traditions is at the heart of this ruminative study of India's identity crisis. Indian novelist and journalist Taseer (Stranger in History) visited the holy city of Benares on the Ganges River to meet members of the priestly Brahmin caste who study ancient Sanskrit literature. These "twice-born" students and professors embody, as Taseer sees it, India's cultural contradictions, as they are devoted to Hindu spirituality, but are aware of its distance from the scientific, materialistic Western worldview that India must pursue to achieve progress and economic development. Resentful and uncertain, they savor stories of magic and miracles, gravitate to Hindu nationalist politics, and cling to the caste prejudices that give them social prestige. Taseer probes his own deracination-he's gay, agnostic, and the illegitimate son of an Indian woman, details that he doesn't discuss with his Brahmin subjects-as part of a Westernized, English-speaking, subcontinental elite that's increasingly isolated and precarious. (He stoically recounts the assassination of his father, a liberal Pakistani politician, by a Muslim fundamentalist in 2011.) Taseer sets these meditations against a gorgeous, sinister portrait of Benares-"the river was flat and oily; beggars circled... there was a darkling energy abroad in the city"-with its religious fervor, funeral pyres, and floating corpses. The lengthy conversations about Hindu philosophy sometimes drag, but Taseer's wonderfully atmospheric rendition of landscapes and gnarled social psychologies make for an engrossing dissection of India's discontents. (Mar.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A British-born novelist who grew up in New Delhi but also spent much of his adult life in New York seeks a closer connection to his native land through explorations into the Brahmin scholarly caste, the "twice-born."Taseer (The Way Things Were, 2014, etc.) began tentative forays back to India to learn Sanskrit in the ancient spiritual center of Benares, "the key to secret India," as his mother told him. "In Benares," he writes, "it was possible to see in miniature every major event that had etched itself onto India's consciousness." The author sought teachers to help him make a more intimate intellectual connection to India. In 2014, he spent many months in the Ganges-skirted city to interview Brahmins, who are by birthright the intellectuals, scientists, astrologers, and scholars of the society; during adolescence, they are "initiated by rite into [their] ancient vocation of the mind." Taseer felt that penetrating the intellectual secrets of this "twice-born" caste would somehow dispel for him the feeling of always being an outsiderthe sense, as Jawaharlal Nehru has written, of feeling a "queer mixture of the East and the West, out of place everywhere, at home nowhere." In presenting his first-person stories of the Brahmins, the author also examines tales of Hindu nationalists; a scholar trying to synthesize the traditional vs. ancient currents; a revolutionary upstart; a spiritual feminist; and a family man who ultimately cannot wash the dish of the visitor who belongs to a lesser caste because it will contaminate his house and village. Unfortunately, despite Taseer's earnest attempts to force a declaration of truth from his Brahmin interviewees, he is evasive about his own ethnicity and identitynamely, his Muslim family and his gay sexual orientationoften stranding readers with him in emotional limbo.A beautifully rendered but flawed exploration of how caste still prevails painfully in modern India. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.