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Imraan Coovadia

Auteur de The Wedding: A Novel

9+ oeuvres 132 utilisateurs 4 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Imraan Coovadia, born in Durban, South Africa, attended Harvard, studied writing at Cornell, and is currently a graduate student at Yale. (Bowker Author Biography)

Œuvres de Imraan Coovadia

The Wedding: A Novel (2001) 46 exemplaires
Tales of the Metric System (2014) 24 exemplaires
Green-Eyed Thieves (1702) 17 exemplaires
A Spy in Time (2018) 14 exemplaires
Gezeitenwechsel (2009) 13 exemplaires
Institute for Taxi Poetry (2012) 13 exemplaires
A Spy In Time 2 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

How They See Us: Meditations on America (2010) — Contributeur — 24 exemplaires

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I can't believe that the beginning of the book is with the main character picking his nose!! Ew! And seeing "the love of his life" (the most beautiful woman in the world) while doing so!!

The writing style is so strange, not understandable until you get the pattern. It's a spoken English-Indian. Not literature.
 
Signalé
mrsdanaalbasha | 1 autre critique | Mar 12, 2016 |
A fantastic new novel by Imraan Coovadia. This one creates an all-too-real fictional global culture of "taxi poets," focusing its story on Adam Ravens, a disciple of Solly Greenfields, one of the fathers of Cape Town taxi poetry--and also a murder victim in the opening pages. It is not a police procedural, but Adam does spend some of the book torn between Solly's discplined style and the more freewheeling, modern and global approach of Gerome Geromian, while exploring the causues of Solly's murder.

The novel functions on at least three levels. One is a fascinating groups of characters. Another is an altogether imagined culture of taxi drivers, sliding door men, and the "taxi poets" who write poems that decorate the sides of the taxis, and even have an institute to learn their craft. The third level is a commentary on the all-to-real culture of contemporary South Africa, including taxi companies that prevent competition by literally bombing buses and trains that are trying to establish new mass transit routes.

Funny, tragic, fascinating from beginning to end, highly recommended, and hope it's published in the United States soon.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
nosajeel | 1 autre critique | Jun 21, 2014 |
A fantastic new novel by Imraan Coovadia. This one creates an all-too-real fictional global culture of "taxi poets," focusing its story on Adam Ravens, a disciple of Solly Greenfields, one of the fathers of Cape Town taxi poetry--and also a murder victim in the opening pages. It is not a police procedural, but Adam does spend some of the book torn between Solly's discplined style and the more freewheeling, modern and global approach of Gerome Geromian, while exploring the causues of Solly's murder.

The novel functions on at least three levels. One is a fascinating groups of characters. Another is an altogether imagined culture of taxi drivers, sliding door men, and the "taxi poets" who write poems that decorate the sides of the taxis, and even have an institute to learn their craft. The third level is a commentary on the all-to-real culture of contemporary South Africa, including taxi companies that prevent competition by literally bombing buses and trains that are trying to establish new mass transit routes.

Funny, tragic, fascinating from beginning to end, highly recommended, and hope it's published in the United States soon.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
jasonlf | 1 autre critique | Apr 16, 2012 |
Indian author; man pursues beautiful woman-she fights him all the way to the last 10pages!
½
 
Signalé
MacsTomes | 1 autre critique | Mar 6, 2007 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
9
Aussi par
1
Membres
132
Popularité
#153,555
Évaluation
4.0
Critiques
4
ISBN
22
Langues
3

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