After a long trip from London, twenty-seven-year-old BBC filmmaker Ray Bhullar arrives at the remote Indian village of Ashwer, which will be the subject of her newest documentary. From the outside, the town projects a cozy air of domesticity—small huts bordering earthen paths, men lounging and drinking tea, women guiding bright cloth through noisy sewing machines. Yet Ashwer is far from traditional. It is an experimental open prison, a village of convicted murderers and their families.
As Ray and her crew settle in, they seek to win the trust of Ashwer’s residents and administrators: Nandini, a women’s counselor and herself an inmate; Jyoti, a prisoner’s wife who is raising her children on the grounds; Sujay, the progressive founder and governor of the society. Ray aims to portray Ashwer as a model of tolerance, yet the longer she and her colleagues stay, the more their need for a dramatic story line intensifies. And as Ray’s moral judgment competes with her professional obligation, her assignment takes an uneasy and disturbing turn.
Incisive, moving, and superbly written, The Village deftly examines the limits of empathy, the slipperiness of reason, and the strength of our principles in the face of personal gain.
Praise for The Village
“Powerful . . . One of the novel’s great strengths is how it maintains an ambience of mystery and menace.”—The New York Times Book Review
“Extraordinary . . . Lalwani writes with wonderful clarity and intelligence.”—The Times (U.K.)
“The Village can creep up and grab you unawares.”—Toronto Star
“[Lalwani’s] prose is evocative and excellent.”—Publishers Weekly
“Thoughtful and beautifully written.”—The Guardian (U.K.)
“Gripping.”—Marie Claire (U.K.)
“Intelligent and disturbing . . . a sharply observed, highly personal book.”—Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
“A thoughtful novel that envelops us in the oppression and beauty of the rural prison . . . Each voice is distinct, believable and stubborn in its refusal to be easily known. . . . Touchingly evocative.”—Financial Times
“Thoughtfully and often beautifully written . . . a candid exploration of journalistic ethics.”—The Observer
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
July 9, 2013 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780812984583
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780812984583
- File size: 2569 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
May 13, 2013
In Lalwani’s solid but slight novel, BBC filmmaker Ray Bhullar travels to India to make a documentary about Ashwer, an experimental penal community of men and women, all convicted murders, many of whom live with their families and travel without guards to jobs in nearby towns. A “prison with no perimeter,” Ashwer is built on the idea that “trust begets trust.” As Ray, her camerawoman Serena, and the film’s on-camera presenter, Nathan, settle into Ashwer, they must gain the trust of the inmate-residents and find the stories that will lend their film drama. They must also navigate the professional and romantic tensions that flare up among the crew. Ray is a well-constructed character, but insufferably earnest; Lalwani is on surer ground with the less deep but more real characters of Nathan, Serena, and the glib warden, Sujay Sanghvi. It’s an interesting glimpse at an unusual world, an exploration of the notions of guilt and atonement, and Lalwani shines in showing how documentarians manufacture drama. Still, the problems of three affluent filmmakers cannot compete with the stories of some of Ashwer’s inmates (like the woman in an arranged, abusive marriage who killed her husband’s mistress). Though Lalwani (Gifted) is at times too timid, her prose is evocative and excellent. Agent: Jin Auh, Wylie Agency.
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