Current:Home > InvestIn Jhumpa Lahiri's 'Roman Stories,' many characters are caught between two worlds -MacroWatch
In Jhumpa Lahiri's 'Roman Stories,' many characters are caught between two worlds
View
Date:2025-04-22 18:03:44
Readers who have missed the compelling narratives that Jhumpa Lahiri wrote in English before her switch to Italian in 2015 will be happy to learn that Roman Stories is a return to form.
This second book of fiction translated from her adopted language is broader in scope and more moving than her muted, somewhat underwhelming novel Whereabouts. Lahiri's focus here is no longer on generational conflicts between Southeast Asian immigrants and their American offspring. But her return to short stories — a form which she wielded so impressively in her 2000 Pulitzer Prize-winning collection of stories, Interpreter of Maladies -- is also a return to fiction that powerfully conveys her characters' valiant efforts to navigate geographic and cultural relocations and find their place in the world.
Like Alberto Moravia's Roman Tales (1954), with its portraits of life in the poorer sections of Rome after the second world war, Lahiri shifts her attention in several of these nine stories from well-to-do expats and native Romans to new refugees and immigrants struggling to gain a toehold in a cruelly unwelcoming society. Particularly heartrending are stories like "Well-Lit House," which is narrated by a young man who gratefully lands in a 500-sq.-ft. apartment in a sketchy neighborhood outside Rome with his gracious, elegantly veiled wife and five small children after years in refugee camps and shared apartments — only to be hounded and chased from it by xenophobic neighbors.
In "The Steps," Lahiri offers a sobering view of modern Rome with a six-part portrait of residents who regularly pass through a flight of 126 stone steps, which have become a hangout for teens who perch on them "like flies on a slice of melon," leaving broken bottles and crushed cigarette packets in their wake. The steps become a twice-daily gauntlet for the hard-working woman who thinks of the 13-year-old son she's left behind with his grandparents on another continent while she cares for two young children and their working parents. A distrustful widow who refuses to have her groceries delivered "by some boy from another country" finds the gathered youth frightening. But for an American expat facing surgery in this foreign country — which her husband uses as a perch for his international business travels — the steps remind her of all that she misses in her former bucolic, wooded house outside New York, where she had hoped to raise their three sons.
Lahiri's characters are frequently ambushed — whether by unexpected emotions, like the husband caught off-guard by his adulterous feelings in "P's Parties" — or by actual assault, like the screenwriter mugged on the deserted steps late one night by a group of kids, who take his cash and the digital watch his young second wife gave him for his 60th birthday. In "The Delivery," a presumably dark-skinned housekeeper out on an errand for her patrona feels pretty plucky in her polka dot skirt — until she's felled in a drive-by attack by two boys on a motorino who derisively call out, "Go wash those dirty legs."
Many of Lahiri's characters are caught between two worlds. But in her recent fiction, the worlds are never specifically identified. Even those born in Roman suffer from a sense of foreignness; they all remain nameless — in sharp contrast with those in her earlier work, such as Gogol Ganguli, the hero of her first novel, The Namesake. This highlights the loss of identity that comes with relocation and alienation, and suggests the universality of such situations. But with this lack of specificity comes a disconcerting remoteness — and, at times, an unwieldy akwardness. In "The Reentry," another story about racial prejudice, the two unnamed women meeting at a trattoria are referred to repeatedly as "the woman in mourning" and "the professor"; names would have been simpler and, if well-chosen, more effective identifiers.
In "Dante Alighieri," the final Roman tale, an American-born scholar of Italian literature married to an older Italian doctor reconsiders the three great betrayals she has committed in her life: of her best friend in college, of her husband, and finally, of her own desires suppressed by "false virtue." We learn how she moved away from her husband by degrees — a sort of continental drift — returning to America to teach while keeping an apartment in Rome. During her beloved mother-in-law's funeral, she reflects: "You travel a certain distance, you desire and make decisions, and you're left with recollections, some shimmering and some disturbing, that you'd rather not conjure on. But today, in the basilica, memory dominates, the deepest kind. It waits for you under the rock — bits of yourself, still living and restless, that shudder when you expose them." And she wonders, "How long must we live to learn how to survive?"
It is a question that underscores many of the stories in this affecting collection.
veryGood! (873)
Related
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Who are the co-conspirators in the Trump Jan. 6 indictment?
- More than 100 firefighters battling 3-alarm fire in west Phoenix industrial area
- Millions stolen in brazen daylight jewelry robbery in Paris
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- Chicago White Sox closer Liam Hendriks undergoes Tommy John surgery
- Kelly Ripa Recalls Daughter Lola Walking in On Her and Mark Consuelos Having Sex, Twice
- Plagued by teacher shortages, some states turn to fast-track credentialing
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- Drug agents fatally shoot 19-year-old man in Georgia. They say he pulled out a gun
Ranking
- Average rate on 30
- Swaths of the US are living through a brutal summer. It’s a climate wake-up call for many
- Kidnapping in Haiti of U.S. nurse Alix Dorsainvil and her daughter sparks protests as locals demand release
- Trump attorney vows strong defense against latest indictment: We are in a constitutional abyss
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- 'A violation of our sovereignty': 2 bodies found in Rio Grande, one near a floating barrier
- Judge tosses charges against executive in South Carolina nuclear debacle, but case may not be over
- Otteroo baby neck floats still on sale despite reports of injury and one infant death
Recommendation
Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
2 US Navy sailors arrested for allegedly spying for China
$2.04B Powerball winner bought $25M Hollywood dream home and another in his hometown
In latest TikTok fad, creators make big bucks off NPC streaming
Former Syrian official arrested in California who oversaw prison charged with torture
Police officer in South Carolina killed by Amtrak train while rescuing someone who called 911
Calling all influencers! Get paid $100k to make content for pizza delivery app, Slice
Paul Reubens' 'Pee-wee is going to live on': Cabazon Dinosaurs paints tribute to late actor