Tiniest House of Time

ISBN: 9789670076164
Checking local availability
RM50.00
Product Details

Publisher,SIRD
Publication Date,
Format,
Weight, 420 g
No. of Pages,

Find this product in our store.
Shelf: Fiction / Adult Fiction / Asian Literary Fiction

Kindly ask our staff if you cannot locate the shelf.

The Tiniest House of Time is more than a family saga, ranging across continents and decades seamlessly, from colonial Burma in the 1930s to nationalist Malaysia in the 1990s and beyond, to Hong Kong and Australia. The reader is thrust into the lives of far-flung middle-class Indian communities: immersed in family and local politics and intimate relationships, swept along in the tide of grand historical events.

History works in cycles, repeating itself, until we finally understand that everything that has happened, has always already happened.

The story is driven by Iyer’s two main characters, both strong women — Susheela Sastri and Sandhya Sastri — who are grandmother and granddaughter, but could have been born of the same atom. Sandhya visits her grandmother's deathbed after having run away from her country, her family, her love, and herself. She remembers her grandmother's stories, of a lost time in Burma, and digs deep to find truth in it. A dying Susheela, impatient with her family's pity, asks Sandhya to read to her. It opens up past events in both their lives, the family dynamics, the forbidden loves, the politics of who can be hated, when, and by whom…And what can they, as women of their times, actually do about it.

About the author

Dr Sreedhevi Iyer was born in Malaysia but has lived in Hong Kong and Australia, and can only answer ‘many places’ when asked where she is from. Her writing has been published in several countries, including the USA, UK, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Australia, Sweden, and Italy. Jungle Without Water was her first book published in Australia (2018), the Southeast Asian edition being shortlisted for the Penang Monthly Book Prize in 2017. Her fiction work has also been nominated for the Pushcart Prize in the US.
She has guest-edited Cha, an Asian literary journal, and Drunken Boat, and was writer-in-residence at Lingnan University of Liberal Arts in Hong Kong. Sreedhevi is currently teaching Creative Writing at the University of Melbourne and RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia.

Customer Reviews

Be the first to write a review
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)
0%
(0)