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An acclaimed novel by the author of The Mistress of Spices , and Before We Visit the Goddess . Jhumpa Lahiri " One Amazing Thing collapses the walls dividing characters and cultures; what endures is a chorus of voices in one single room." Late afternoon sun sneaks through the windows of a passport and visa office in an unnamed American city. Most customers and even most office workers have come and gone, but nine people remain. A punky teenager with an unexpected gift. An upper-class Caucasian couple whose relationship is disintegrating. A young Muslim-American man struggling with the fallout of 9/11. A graduate student haunted by a question about love. An African-American ex-soldier searching for redemption. A Chinese grandmother with a secret past. And two visa office workers on the verge of an adulterous affair. When an earthquake rips through the afternoon lull, trapping these nine characters together, their focus first jolts to their collective struggle to survive. There's little food. The office begins to flood. Then, at a moment when the psychological and emotional stress seems nearly too much for them to bear, the young graduate student suggests that each tell a personal tale, "one amazing thing" from their lives, which they have never told anyone before. And as their surprising stories of romance, marriage, family, political upheaval, and self-discovery unfold against the urgency of their life-or-death circumstances, the novel proves the transcendent power of stories and the meaningfulness of human expression itself. From Chitra Divakaruni, author of such finely wrought, bestselling novels as Sister of My Heart, The Palace of Illusions , and The Mistress of Spices , comes her most compelling and transporting story to date. One Amazing Thing is a passionate creation about survival -- and about the reasons to survive.
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This was a book I was looking forward to reading an ARC of when I received it in the mail. I wasn't entirely disappointed but wasn't thrilled either.
A modern version of Canterbury Tales, set in an office to get visas to travel to India, an earthquake hits and traps people that by any other means, would have never talked to each other.
In order to keep each other occupied and not paying attention to the doom that is before them, they tell stories of their lives about the "one amazing thing" that has happened in their life.
Some of these stories didn't make it believable that it was the "one" or even amazing. For a book that should have inspired, it felt like a light summer, beach read in the end. The description of the earthquakes and what was happening in the building got more and more horrific as the tale went on. In the beginning I was shrugging my shoulders about it, and towards the end, anxiety set in!
A good enough read, but I think I was wanting more out of it!