Book: 5/52.
Remembering Babylon - David Malouf.
My Rating: 1/5.
I have started a new practice of accepting only books from friends and relatives who travel from abroad, provided they are by authors from that part of the world only :). So far, I have received a few Malaysians, Americans, Brits, Russians and Aussies (like this one), and a few from Finland are in the pipeline as they are bought, but the travel is taking time. Now, this one came from Aussyland last month, and it happens to be a Booker nominee, I guess that is the reason my close friend picked this one up to impress me, as he NEVER reads. I was excited to lay my hands on it, especially when I read the note on the last page (date and city/country of buying), but what a disaster it was. It almost became my reading career’s second book, which I would have put in the DNF category after the much hated “The Secret” I threw out of my 15th-floor living room window (long back). Initially, it starts on an intriguing note when a kid washes ashore after he falls off a ship and lands in this small village. The way people take him, and he becomes an acceptable part of their society. Still, it becomes cumbersome to read every chapter from the point of view of a new character, which has no introduction to the reader, and the prose keeps on going in no set direction. It goes so off track that the author simply forgets to tell us what happened next to the lost and found guy, not until the last chapter, which leads to a very dissatisfying ending. Fortunately, this was only 180 pages, yet it took its own sweet time to come to an end as I didn’t want to leave it unfinished, breaking my own record. This was definitely Booker material as it made no sense to me, now I know how it qualified but never won it in the finale. I really need a light-hearted book to wash off this one’s memory.
Do let me know if you have read this one or any other David Malouf book, especially if it worked for you. I have another from Australia, hoping that one works for me big time.