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Average rating: 4/5

Based on 9 ratings

The Assassin's Song

by M.g. Vassanji

Doubleday Canada | August 12, 2008 | Trade Paperback

M.G. Vassanji's magnificent new novel provides further proof of his unique, wide ranging and profound genius. The Assassin's Song is a shining study of the conflict between ancient loyalties and modern desires, a conflict that creates turmoil the world over - and it is at once an intimate portrait of one man's painful struggle to hold the earthly and the spiritual in balance.

In The Assassin's Song, Karsan Dargawalla tells the story of the medieval Sufi shrine of Pirbaag, and his betrayal of its legacy. But Karsan's conflicted attempt to settle accounts quickly blossoms into a layered tale that spans centuries: from the mysterious Nur Fazal's spiritual journeys through thirteenth century India, to his shrine's eventual destruction in the horrifying "riots" of 2002.

From the age of eleven, Karsan has been told that one day he will succeed his father as guardian of the Shrine of the Wanderer: as the highest spiritual authority in their region, he will be God's representative to the multitudes who come to the shrine for penance and worship. But Karsan's longings are simpler: to play cricket with his friends, to discover more of the exciting world he reads about in the newspapers his friend Raja Singh, a truck driver, brings him from all over India.

Half on a whim, Karsan applies to study at Harvard, but when he is unexpectedly offered a scholarship there he must try to meld his family's wishes with his own yearnings. Two years immersed in the intellectual and sexual ferment of America splits him further, until finally Karsan abdicates his successorship to the eight hundred-year-old throne.

But even as Karsan succeeds in his "ordinary" life - marrying and having a son, becoming a professor in suburban British Columbia - his heritage haunts him in unexpected ways. And after tragedy strikes, both in Canada and Pirbaag, he is drawn back across thirty years of silence and separation to discover what, if anything, is left for him in India.

Both sweeping and intimate, The Assassin's Song is a great novel in the grandest sense: a book that captures the intricate complexities of the individual conscience even as it grippingly portrays entire civilizations in tumult.


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  • Community Reviews
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    Rating: 5/5

    Moving - cannot recommend higher!

    Ariel

    • Top Book Reviewer

    3 years ago

    "The Assassin's Song" is an amazing book that moved me to my core. I have met a lot of amazing Indians and Pakistani through the years, without realizing the historical trauma that lies between the homelands of their people. Remember a friend's effort in explaining to me the scene of conflicts between Muslim and Hindus in the movie "Slumdog Millionaire"; here, M. G. Vassanji has plunged us into the turmoil and sadness of such tragedies in his beautiful work of "The Assassin's Song". The character of Nur Fazal in this novel maybe imaginary, the vision of harmony and respect between people with different religious beliefs and cultures is as real and as crucial for anyone who loves humanity. With love, mercy and respect, we all can put in our efforts in making world peace a reality, instead of an unattainable hope and dream.

    • Was this review
      helpful to you?

    Rating: 2/5

    Uhm...

    This review is from: The Assassin's Song (Hardcover)

    SPARKY

    4 years ago

    MG Vassanji rides a different boat in this book. Not as enjoyable as his others.

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