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Whereabouts
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
The new novel from the Pulitzer Prize-winning, Man Booker Prize-shortlisted author: a haunting portrait of a woman, her decisions, her conversations, her solitariness, in a beautiful and lonely Italian city The woman moves through the city, her city, on her own. She moves along its bright pavements; she passes over its bridges, through its shops and pools and bars. She slows her pace to watch a couple fighting, to take in the sight of an old woman in a waiting room; pauses to drink her coffee in a shaded square. Sometimes her steps take her to her grieving mother, sealed off in her own solitude. Sometimes they take her to the station, where the trains can spirit her away for a short while. But in the arc of a year, as one season gives way to the next, transformation awaits. One day at the sea, both overwhelmed and replenished by the sun's vital heat, her perspective will change forever. A rare work of fiction, Whereabouts first written in Italian and then translated by the author herself brims with the impulse to cross barriers. By grafting herself onto a new literary language, Lahiri has pushed herself to a new level of artistic achievement. A dazzling evocation of a city, its captures a woman standing on one of life's thresholds, reflecting on what has been lost and facing, with equal hope and rage, what may lie ahead.
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Teresereading
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks 💜💜💜 4mo
Eggs Pretty 💜💙💜 4mo
21 likes2 comments
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Annie09
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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“Solitude: it's become my trade. As it requires a certain discipline, it's a condition I try to perfect. And yet it plagues me, it weighs on me in spite of my knowing it so well.”

https://english.shabd.in/whereabouts-jhumpa-lahiri/book/10086942

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kbuggle
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

Lyrical and flowing, not so much about the plot as the prose.

11 likes1 stack add
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MaGoose
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

Fabulous collection of short stories. 👌

Bought this book because I'd read her first story collection, Interpreter of Maladies, several years ago.

This collection did not disappoint. Excellent.

#readathon #OutstandingOctober @Andrew65 #shortstories

Teresereading I loved it too 2y
Andrew65 Great 👏👏👏 2y
34 likes2 comments
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TheEllieMo
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

A tiny book that wouldn‘t be my usual type of reading, but which made an impression on me. We see life through the eyes of a woman woman as she moves about the city she lives. Although she has many friends, she seems on the periphery, looking in, observing all the time. We learn the minimum about her own life, but what we do adds to the feel of the character‘ outsideness. There‘s a languid feel to the book, but it gives you much to think about

BkClubCare I found this quietly compelling and couldn‘t stop reading, but somehow unhurried. 2y
32 likes1 stack add1 comment
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brushlo
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
Pickpick

very short read…more like a collection of feelings or meditations…themes of loneliness, family trauma and the rhythms of life. enjoyable. my only critique is that maybe is was too one note. i wanted to uncover more of the narrators inner world.

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anushareflects
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

Lahiri‘s writing is just phenomenal. I‘d read anything she writes. Her prose simply ebbs and flows like a winding river. This was a very unique, atmospheric read. Since I matched the cover that day, I thought it apt to make a similarly atmospheric photograph with the book.

TalesandTexts I love the photo chosen for this review. 2y
6 likes1 comment
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Smrloomis
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Mehso-so

I feel a little torn about this one. I didn‘t love the beginning and found the style very bland and too spare at various points. I guess I‘d say this one was intriguing enough for me to finish it but ultimately unsatisfying.

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Smrloomis
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Love this epigraph but don‘t know how I feel about the book so far…

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JillR
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

A spare, simple novella. An unnamed woman in an unnamed Italian city talks of fragments of her daily life chapter by chapter; her local cafe, her office, an encounter with a potential lover, her loneliness yet desire for solitude. We never learn much about her but she does tentatively dip into her childhood. Nothing like the other books I‘ve read by this author (I loved The Namesake in particular), this was both sad and strangely soothing.

squirrelbrain Great review. I loved this one but haven‘t read any others by the author. 3y
JillR @squirrelbrain Thank you ☺️. I really loved The Namesake, in fact I think it was one of my favourite reads of last year. Completely different to this one. I‘ve also read and enjoyed The Lowland 3y
squirrelbrain I‘ll stack both of those and hope to get to them ‘some‘ day! Thanks Jill! 3y
44 likes1 stack add3 comments
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Teresereading
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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‘In the mornings after breakfast I walk past a small marble plaque propped against the high wall flanking the road.‘
#firstlinefridays
@ShyBookOwl

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SanjanaGhosh
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

I could see my future in this book xD

wanderinglynn Sounds intriguing. 3y
25 likes1 comment
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BekaReid
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

Lahiri's writing is beautiful as she explores the everyday, the ordinary in these interconnected vignettes. Excellent!

IuliaC Lovely review! This one's on my tbr list too 3y
16 likes1 comment
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AlizaApp
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

I am very much here for Lahiri‘s Italian era. This novel, a series of interconnected anecdotes, she wrote in Italian and then translated to English herself. A simple and quiet story that made me want to go drink espresso at a cafe in Rome.

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WellReadCatLady
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

Fantastic book! Unnamed character was relatable and the authors way of catching the introspective monologue was perfect.

charl08 Yes. Such a lovely book. 3y
Chelsea.Poole I agree! 3y
monalyisha I like your photo. 😊 3y
31 likes3 comments
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Chelsea.Poole
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

A gorgeous novel. Snippets of a woman‘s solitary life spent in an Italian city. I know this type of writing style won‘t work for everyone but I enjoyed the short chapters and sparse prose. The moments that make up a life. Don‘t read this if you need plot!

Simona I want what you have on the plate 🤤😋 3y
BiblioLitten What @Simona said! 🤤 3y
Chelsea.Poole @Simona @BiblioLitten it was coffee cake (made by my mom ?) with sautéed peaches , strawberries and whipped cream. With coffee. It was quite good ? 3y
BarbaraBB Happy you liked it! The book I mean 😀 (edited) 3y
96 likes1 stack add4 comments
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Chelsea.Poole
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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I love weekend mornings ♥️
FINALLY getting around to Whereabouts and it‘s going very well so far. I wish I would have read it in time for #camptob

Suet624 Where can I find that wonderful mug??? 3y
TiredLibrarian Beautiful setting; love the mug! 3y
Cathythoughts Lovely picture 💫 3y
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batsy
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Mehso-so

What I liked:

1) A writer of South Asian heritage who previously wrote diasporic fiction about the immigrant experience now writing a plotless novel about an unnamed woman in an unnamed city.

2) The way the narrator filters her perceptions & love of solitude through the lens of her relationship to her parents.

What I didn't like:

1) The lack of personality, wit, or humour. The narrator's tone felt flat; the style generic. I'll forget this soon

batsy Now I know why I read contemporary litfic several years after their release ... apparently I'm a curmudgeon who expects quite a lot from books that gain instant praise 😆 #CampTOB @BarbaraBB 3y
TheKidUpstairs I've seen a number of people who have been left with the same feeling. It's unfortunate, Lahiri is generally so adept at forging connection between her characters and readers, it's why I love her writing so much. I'm sure I'll still read this one, but I'm not as excited about it... 3y
TrishB 😂😂 fair review though! 3y
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batsy @TheKidUpstairs Yes, there's something missing here that left me feeling quite empty. I did see that some people really liked it, though, so hopefully it works for you as well 😊 3y
batsy @TrishB 😁 3y
nathandrake1997 Brilliant review ❤️ Prior to its release I was really looking forward to read this since I haven't read Jhumpa Lahiri yet and the synopsis sounded like exactly the kind of books I usually love. But after its mixed reception, with common criticism being about its rather flat prose, I'm not so sure anymore. 3y
Ruthiella Good point about her breaking out of the emigrant lit-fic mold here! 3y
BarbaraBB Wonderful review. I enjoyed it a lot but I do agree with you that I doubt it‘ll have a lasting impact. 3y
Flaneurette Soon after finishing this I thought ok fine but not too memorable but now that I have more distance I find myself thinking about it. It seems to circle around the terrible emptiness at the center of her life without ever specifically addressing it. I think the flat prose mirrors her flat life 3y
batsy @nathandrake1997 Thank you! It was a very quick read and it went down easy, so perhaps you could still give it a go when the mood hits. People get something different out of books like these so it could surprise you 🙂 3y
batsy @Ruthiella I did like that she broke out of her usual mold! 3y
batsy @BarbaraBB Thank you! And I would have preferred a stronger voice/POV but you raise a really interesting point @Flaneurette and it's true that the prose mirrors life. 3y
Graywacke @batsy appreciate your take. I didn‘t like Namesake - just felt flat…and I don‘t think she‘s normally a flat writer. I was worried this might be like that. Still, I‘m curious. 3y
batsy @Graywacke It's an interesting read, I think. But there was just a fundamental bit missing from it. I did like The Namesake but I read it when it came out—I might feel different about it now. 3y
AvidReader25 I absolutely loved both of her short story collections, but most of her other work has felt flat to me. I‘m not sure I could put my finger on why. 3y
batsy @AvidReader25 Tbh I think that's how I feel about her work, too. I liked The Namesake well enough when I read it years ago but I do wonder if I'd feel the same about it now. 3y
88 likes16 comments
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Lindy
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

I enjoy narratives told in evocative vignettes, and introspective character studies, and quiet stories about solidarity women—so this novella is definitely my kind of thing. In spite of the MC‘s careful observations of other people, however, she doesn‘t share much about herself. Translation by the author; #audiobook read by Susan Vinciotti Bonito.

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Lindy
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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The sexism in this novel troubles me. Example: “I‘ve always felt in someone‘s shadow, even though I don‘t have to compare myself to brothers who are smarter, or to sisters who are prettier.” In another place, the narrator says something along the lines of all women having a common experience of having had affairs with married men. 🤨

TrishB Ouch 😣 3y
Anna40 😣 3y
CarolynM Oh dear!☹️ 3y
Lindy @TrishB @Anna40 @CarolynM The MC wallows in her lonely unhappiness; I can also accept that she has these kinds of misguided thoughts. But I would prefer more examination of them. 3y
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BarbaraBB
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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The #CampToB discussion about the second half of Whereabouts is rather negative imo. One of them even says she wouldn‘t have finished it if it weren‘t for the tournament. What do you think?

And while you‘re here, please vote for our July winner! The official July winner will be announced next week. Please vote in the comments!

KarenUK I loved this. I understand it‘s not for everyone… as there is basically no plot… but the writing is lovely, and didn‘t want to put it down. I enjoyed my time with this woman. 3y
KarenUK And this gets my vote over the Ishiguro though I enjoyed both…. 3y
Lindy I‘m 2/3 of the way through Whereabouts and I enjoy the writing style but I‘m troubled by the unexamined biases of the narrator. 3y
See All 22 Comments
batsy I have to agree with Gail in the discussion; compared to Lahiri's earlier novels written in English, this felt a bit off in its prose style. A bit too simplistic, & as a result maybe not as profound as it could have been. I also would have liked the narrator's personality to have come out more—an introspective novel like this written in vignettes really relies on tone, & the tone of this book felt like the department store background music 😬 3y
batsy I vote for Klara and the Sun, I think 🤔😅 3y
Cinfhen My vote goes to 3y
BarbaraBB @batsy I agree with that too, about the simplistic style. Maybe because of the Italian. But she felt completely different from the Lahiri in earlier works. However, I felt that same simplicity unfortunately in Klara, while Ishiguro didn‘t change languages. My vote goes to 3y
squirrelbrain I agree with @KarenUK - I enjoyed spending time in her life. I also wondered if the simplistic style was down to the translation Barbara, but I enjoyed that style nonetheless. My vote goes to 3y
Ruthiella I‘m in the minority, but my vote goes to 3y
BkClubCare I vote for Whereabouts- I liked it. Dare I say, it seemed our Mod & Activity Leader didn‘t like the book because they didn‘t like the character. (Uh oh) But they did explore it in their discussion so I can applaud that. (edited) 3y
BarbaraBB @BkClubCare You are right about that I think, they both didn‘t care much for the character I think (like I didn‘t care for Klara so who am I to blame 😉?! 3y
AnneCecilie My vote goes to Whereabouts 3y
Well-ReadNeck I adored Whereabouts. I think, in part, because it felt like a great read for the pandemic. My reading has changed a lot during the last year and a half (as have my likes). I‘m not sure I would have liked this quiet, introspective novel in the beforetimes, but it gets my vote here 3y
Well-ReadNeck @Ruthiella - a rare time that we don‘t agree 😉 (although I did like both books) 3y
Ruthiella @Well-ReadNeck The streak couldn‘t last forever! 😅 3y
cariashley I liked a lot of the writing but it wasn‘t enough to make up for the total lack of plot. But I still liked it better than Klara, so my vote goes to Whereabouts! 3y
BarbaraBB @Well-ReadNeck @Ruthiella I am shocked! You are always in sync 🤍 3y
Flaneurette I really liked the themes in Klara but Whereabouts is squarely in my wheelhouse with a plotless impressionistic story of a woman of a certain age... so far my favorite of the tournament (edited) 3y
vivastory My vote is for Whereabouts. I hope you're having a great vacation! 3y
sarahbarnes My vote is for Whereabouts too! 3y
65 likes22 comments
review
AnneCecilie
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

A single woman in living in an Italian city, walks through the city. As she do she visits the office, the bookstore, the museum, the pool and other places. She takes the time to think about these places and other times she was there.

A book focusing on the small things in life because the small things is actually what makes a life.

#CampToB

BarbaraBB She lives so consciously indeed. While reading it I sometimes envied her for that reason. 3y
75 likes3 stack adds1 comment
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BarbaraBB
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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#CampToB

We‘re discussing the first half of Wherabouts, in which a woman questioning her place in the world, wavers between the need to belong and the refusal to form lasting ties. Sigrid Nuñez supposedly has said this narrator is clinically depressed, Jhumpa Lahiri herself said about her narrator, “I think the book is about her relationship with her solitude.”

So what do you think?

Ruthiella I didn‘t find the narrator to be depressed. I felt she enjoyed her solitude, that that was her natural inclination. She has friends, she interacted with people...she just chose to live alone. I love Lahiri‘s writing style, but I‘m not sure this book is going to stick with me. 3y
BkClubCare I found this book compelling- in that way where I was annoyed by interruptions! And yet, chapters are so short it was a game to tell myself I would read to the next and then it was like potato chips. I *HAD* to keep reading. Love when I can get that absorbed. (edited) 3y
squirrelbrain Interesting - I hadn‘t thought of her as depressed at all. I didn‘t even feel like she was lonely - like @Ruthiella I thought that she revelled in her solitude. 3y
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Cinfhen I didn‘t find her depressed either @squirrelbrain @Ruthiella It felt like she was at a crossroads, embracing her independence and freedom but maybe taking stock of her choices?!? 3y
Chelsea.Poole I am starting this one tonight. I meant to read it last week but, *life* 🙄 3y
BarbaraBB @Ruthiella @BkClubCare @squirrelbrain @Cinfhen I thought I‘d miss something, because I didn‘t think of her as being depressed either, but the #CampToB people thought it very well possible. So I‘m glad you didn‘t think so either. I was actually discussing the book with a friend yesterday and we kind of envied the narrator in being so comfortable in het solitaire way of living and making the choices she wants. (edited) 3y
BarbaraBB @Chelsea.Poole I think you‘ll like this one too. Looking forward to your thoughts. 3y
Well-ReadNeck I agree with the group. Didn‘t see her as depressed. I definitely see the author‘s point, this did feel like a study in solitude. Sometimes she seemed lonely, sometimes regretful or questioning about her choice to be alone, but, ultimately she seemed very comfortable alone. 3y
batsy I didn't think the narrator was depressed, either. I found it interesting how she tried to navigate her solitude & the little clues about how she grew up & her relationship with her parents. I too envy the narrator her mostly comfortable life @BarbaraBB The thing that surprised me most was the prose style—it feels a bit simplified compared to Lahiri's previous books, & I wonder if it's because she translated her own writing from Italian. 3y
Simona Like all of you, I don‘t think that the narrator is depressed, but as @Well-ReadNeck said - she is very comfortable being alone and pondering about little things around her. This was my first book by Lahiri and I agree with you @batsy I was also surprised by the prose style. I excepted much more from her, although I think this is not the consequence of the translation, but the opposite - I know that she is fluent in Italian language, but …. 👇 3y
Simona …. but expressing your self in more complex way is different thing. I think that the prose style is ‘simple‘ in Italian also.🤷🏻‍♀️ 3y
vivastory I am going to weigh in on this one when I finish it this weekend. I've really enjoyed the discussions, although it's been difficult for me to contribute in real time as work has been incredibly hectic. 3y
BarbaraBB @vivastory Hopefully you‘ll have a bit of me-time during the weekend to wind down! 3y
vivastory @BarbaraBB Thanks! I'm planning on it. It has been a difficult week at work. Looking forward to Lahiri, Hartley & a few spirits of some sort! 🍷 🍺 🍸 3y
BarbaraBB @vivastory Cheers 🍷 🍷 3y
AnneCecilie I never thought of her as depressed or lonely, to me she was someone living her life, and as she went about doing that she would look back on other times she had been in those places. 3y
batsy @Simona That's interesting to think about for sure and makes me wish I was also fluent in Italian to kind of understand how the prose style appears in translation. 3y
54 likes17 comments
review
cariashley
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Mehso-so

A very quiet novel; I‘m not sure how I really feel about it. I‘ve been mixed on Lahiri in the past but this feels like a big departure for her, which makes sense given the translation element. While I really liked a lot of the observations and the writing, the tone kept me at a distance. This felt more experimental vs fully realized. #camptob #catsoflitsy

RaeLovesToRead Cute kitty 🥰 3y
cariashley @RaeLovesToRead thanks, Percy is a great reading buddy ☺️ 3y
BookishMarginalia Adorable #PercyCat 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 3y
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cariashley @BookishMarginalia 💕 I should add that hashtag to his previous appearances 😹 3y
Kerrbearlib Sweet kitty! 3y
BookishMarginalia Yes, indeed! We love easily scrolling through our cat pics — I‘m sure you will too 3y
52 likes6 comments
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BarbaraBB
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

We‘re introduced to the life of a woman who lives a quiet, solitary life. She has her routines, her work, her friends and lovers and her past. And then, after 157 pages, we leave her to it.

With that popular style of writing so sparsely it reminds me of authors like Offill but Lahiri knows how to add exactly that what makes this book unique, maybe even lyrical, in as few words as possible. #CampToB

erzascarletbookgasm Lovely photo 👌 stacking too 3y
76 likes3 stack adds1 comment
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BarbaraBB
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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My feelings exactly. We‘re finally having summer again here and the city feels crispy and fresh and full of chances and promises. There‘s laughing and music and the faint smell of weed. I love reading this book in the sun on a bench in front of my house. Maybe covid will one day be over.

TrishB We‘re having too much summer here! 3y
MicheleinPhilly @TrishB SAME. Sooooo hot and torrential storms that keep flooding our cellar. 😩 3y
BarbaraBB @TrishB Really? It must be brexit 😉 we‘re having a lousy summer so far. 3y
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BarbaraBB @MicheleinPhilly That is tough. We‘re having floods as well but not where I live fortunately. But climate change is urging for attention and action 3y
TrishB @BarbaraBB @MicheleinPhilly no floods here at the moment, but 30 degrees which is way too hot for me. 3y
MicheleinPhilly @TrishB Way too hot. Our heat index yesterday (what it feels like) was 40. 🥵 I need to move to Antarctica. 3y
BarbaraBB @TrishB @MicheleinPhilly 40 is way too much. 30 is only bearable when it‘s windy and you‘re at the beach but not while working in the city! 3y
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Cinfhen
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

Once I realized this was a novel and not a memoir, I began to appreciate the skill and depth much more. What essentially reads as ramblings or diary entries is in fact a melancholy existence of a middle age woman. Really beautiful writing and often sharp observations of a life at it‘s midway mark. An interesting choice/pairing for #CampToB21 going against a very different story (Klara and the Sun). I much prefer this novel. #OneSittingRead

squirrelbrain Great review! I much prefer this one over the Ishiguro too. 3y
Cathythoughts Oh I liked Namesake… this one sounds good 👍🏻❤️ 3y
Cinfhen It‘s VERY different in style from Namesake @Cathythoughts but the writing is as lovely and powerful 3y
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Cinfhen It‘s a hard book to describe @squirrelbrain but it felt full bodied even though the pages & content were pretty sparse (edited) 3y
BarbaraBB I am looking forward to this one. Great review! 🤍 3y
Cinfhen I definitely think you‘re going to enjoy this book @BarbaraBB 3y
BarbaraBB I hope so! Based on your review I think so too! 3y
KathyWheeler What‘s also interesting to me about this book is that she wrote it in Italian and then translated it into English. I saw an interview where she discussed that process. 3y
Cinfhen Agreed @KathyWheeler I‘m not even sure that Italian is her first language- it‘s very impressive 3y
KathyWheeler @Cinfhen it‘s not. I can‘t remember what she said her first language is. Italian may be her 3rd or 4th. 3y
Cinfhen Really amazing @KathyWheeler 3y
britt_brooke Nice review! 3y
KarenUK Me too… @Cinfhen @squirrelbrain definitely preferred this to the Ishiguro. I really loved this💕 (edited) 3y
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review
ClairesReads
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

A beautifully constructed, slight novella about the tension between solitude and loneliness that exists in all of our lives to varying degrees. This was my first foray into Lahiri and I was struck by the thoughtfulness and care with which each sentence was constructed. This collection of vignettes are expertly observed insights into human nature and connection. It reminded me a lot of reading Rachel Cusk.

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Caterina
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Squeezing a couple minutes of reading the tagged while chaplain on-call at the hospital. Someone brought these flowers from their garden today, so I'm enjoying sitting by them and taking a breath after a busy 10.5 hours on-call. 🥰

BookishMarginalia Gorgeous pic! 3y
Suet624 That‘s a very long day. 💕💕 3y
Caterina @BookishMarginalia 🥰 @Suet624 Yes! Tiring and meaningful and long. Now I'm enjoying some rest and dog snuggles today. 🥰 3y
34 likes3 comments
review
squirrelbrain
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

Saw that this was immediately available on Libby so thought I‘d get a head start on #campTOB. It‘s a really short book so I read most of it in one go at the hairdressers this morning.

I won‘t spoil anything so I‘ll wait until the discussions later in the month to review in more detail, but I loved it! Gorgeous cover too….

Gissy I read this one in the Spanish edition. I really liked it too. 3y
vivastory Did you like this or Klara more? 3y
squirrelbrain Oh, this one by far @vivastory 😁 What about you Scott, have you read them both yet? What do you think @gissy? (edited) 3y
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vivastory Not yet, going to read the Lahiri a bit closer to the discussion. I have a feeling I'll like it more though 3y
squirrelbrain I look forward to your review @vivastory 😁 3y
BarbaraBB I am very much looking forward to this one too. I think (and hope) I‘ll like it better than Klara too! 3y
Megabooks Why are British cover always better!! 😩 3y
Megabooks And I enjoyed this too! 3y
66 likes8 comments
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BkClubCare
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Road trip! On our way to Nebraska. Mail was just delivered so am reading a lovely letter from @Ruthiella ! #rollingbackmymorerebelliousinstincts LOL
Bringing along my next #TOBSummerCamp2021 read; I admire how people can read to the time frame but that stresses me out for some reason. #20BooksofSummer.

Tamra We love the Chadron area in western NE. 💜 3y
BkClubCare @Tamra - on our way to Beatrice, south of Lincoln. 3y
Ruthiella Have a fabulous trip! 😃 3y
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vivastory I just returned from picking this up at the library. Enjoy your trip! 3y
BkClubCare @vivastory - race ya! It‘s SO short. (But road is bumpy so am only on page 10 🤣) 3y
BkClubCare @Ruthiella - thanks and thanks for a lovely letter (and book suggestions) 3y
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Caterina
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Take breaks when you can. Rest matters. ❤️ After work yesterday I tucked myself into a corner by the window in Panera and read while slowly eating dinner. 🥰

marleed I‘m doing that right now. I could have run an errand between appts - or I could go sit quietly at Panera! 3y
43 likes1 comment
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Caterina
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Sunday afternoon reading 🥰 Excited to have my hands on the new Jhumpa Lahiri! My mom got it from the library and handed it to me after she finished it. I'm 18 pages in and it's glorious so far!

MidnightBookGirl That looks like a comfy reading chair! 3y
Caterina @MidnightBookGirl It sure is! 😍 I love setting up camp here when I'm at my parents' house! 3y
catiewithac I loved that book about socialism! 3y
41 likes3 comments
review
Pinta
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Mehso-so

Writers who self-translate fascinate me. Federman, Beckett, Nabokov, Borges—fascinating for other reasons plenty—but something about recrafting your own work, the losses, the potential gains. Spanning linguistic distance. Something odd in English “Whereabouts” that might stem from self-translation? Extra distance, pronoun overuse, a jump in style. Strong vignettes from urban life, but feels like there‘s no “there” there. Needs weight. Trans 2021.

Caterina I just picked this one up today! I love your thoughts on writers who self-translate. Hopefully this one will manage to land for me - if not, it's short at least! 3y
Pinta Definitely not for me to say that the translation is the issue, but it‘s just a jump in style compared to her previous books. Hope you enjoy it! 3y
9 likes2 comments
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Karmapen
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
Mehso-so

This was the first Jhumpa Lahiri book I didn‘t absolutely adore and I was surprised. The narrator and the whole story felt distant, clouded, so I didn‘t feel immersed the way I am used to. Still, there were passages that were so beautifully written it was worth to reading just to savor them.

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KarenUK
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

#campTOB @BarbaraBB @Cinfhen

Melancholy and just lovely. LITERALLY nothing happens in this slim little novel, but I kind of loved it anyway. Beautifully simple prose, an unnamed middle-aged woman goes about her daily routines and chores, in an unnamed Italian city. Chapters are brief, each location changing, people are watched. It‘s about nothing, but everything. (continued in comments ⬇️)

KarenUK About how solitude becomes loneliness in the blink of an eye. How there is beauty in the most mundane of things, or how the kindness of a stranger can bring you to tears. But I do warn you.... if you need a story.... avoid this. If you don‘t... then let the loveliness wash over you.... 💕
(edited) 3y
Ruthiella I‘m reading it now and also really enjoying it. It reminds me of The Friend by Sigrid Nunez and Open City by Teju Cole...just a narrator wandering around both physically and mentally. 3y
KarenUK @Ruthiella oh I‘ve not read either of those.... but now I want to! 💕 3y
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JennyM Sounds perfect to me ✨ 3y
Megabooks Great review! 3y
ChaoticMissAdventures I loved this too! Shows how a book can be all language and completely wonderful. 3y
Cinfhen Great review!! I‘m looking forward to this one, I think 😜 3y
BarbaraBB Wonderful review. My BFF says the same so I can‘t wait to read it. But I am going to read them along with #CampToB 3y
Chelsea.Poole I love your review! 3y
erzascarletbookgasm Sounds good, lovely review 👍 3y
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Suet624
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

At first it seemed like a book that someone like me could write. Short chapters, seemingly rather simple. Of course that‘s not how I felt by the end. A wonderful, reflective series of thoughts about her life and how she navigates through her experiences. I appreciated her thoughts on loneliness versus being alone. It takes skill to write such a sparse book that is so captivating.

#CampTOB

Ruthiella I just downloaded this from the library. At 10% I can already tell this is going to go down easy! 3y
Suet624 @Ruthiella Yes! I hope you like it. 3y
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Suet624
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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That first sentence is all you need to know about me. I have never been able to spend $$ on myself. This woman had so perfectly described my relationship to money in this chapter. #CampToB

BarbaraBB That is a very good start. My best friend loved this one! She never buys herself anything either 😘 3y
Suet624 @BarbaraBB I thought this book was too light at the start. The further I read the more immersive it felt. 3y
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manirudh2000
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

From the Pulitzer Prize winner of 2000, comes her fourth novel, first published in Italian and now in English.
A poetic read with rich prose and vivid imagery. Written like a daily diary of a 40 something woman living alone in an unnamed town in Italy. The insecurities, the fears and the regrets....
Though mundane, the manner of writing pulls you in strongly. Please read my review here https://rb.gy/rbrzme

🙏🏼🙏🏼

#bookreviews #booklovers

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Floresj
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

I‘m not even sure what it‘s about, but I loved it.

Suet624 Love this review and totally understand. 3y
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BookishTrish
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

In the beforetimes, I‘d have enjoyed Lahore‘s writing, but found these loosely connected often plotless sketches somewhat dull. Now I found their everyday-ness enchanting. Tales of train trips and lunches out sound impossibly exotic. #audiostitching

BarbaraBB Great review! I‘m having this one on my shelves too. I hope I‘ll like it as much. 4y
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Suet624
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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I‘ve read Lockwood‘s book already. Found these 3 at 2 different libraries. On a waitlist for Detransition,Baby and Everyone Knows Your Mother is a Witch. This summer I‘m ready for #CampToB. So excited.

BarbaraBB You are doing great! I have Klara and Whereabouts too, but am still trying to get copies of three others 🤞🏽 4y
Suet624 @BarbaraBB how are you doing finding the books? 3y
BarbaraBB I borrowed a copy of Peaces, and. bought Detransition, Baby. still looking for Witch! 3y
Suet624 @BarbaraBB witch is the only one I can‘t find! 😳 3y
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TheBookStacker
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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I‘m ready for this.

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Twocougs
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

Elegant, stunning writing about an unnamed female narrator about her everyday life. I was hoping that eventually a great joy would happen for her though.

Megabooks Great review! 4y
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Megabooks
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

Originally written in Italian, these conversations continue her dialogue with her new language by exploring the everyday conversations of an unnamed narrator. These may be the words Lahiri herself uses around the market, on the train, and in stores. This time she chose to translate the book herself, but she stayed true to the conversational nature of the work rather than trying to elevate it to a Pulitzer Prize level. An interesting book.

Megabooks Tagging people who expressed interest. The #audiobook is enjoyable, but I‘m guessing print would be equally good. @vivastory @Bookwormjillk @mhillis @Cinfhen (edited) 4y
Cinfhen Hmmmm, another #BorrowNotBuy for me, I think!! 4y
Bookwormjillk Thanks! 4y
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Megabooks @Cinfhen I‘d agree with that! 4y
Megabooks @Bookwormjillk 💜👍🏻 4y
BarbaraBB I bet you are the first person to read this book! Wasn‘t it published today?! ❤️ 4y
Megabooks @BarbaraBB it was published Tuesday here, so yes, I got to it very quickly!! 4y
BarbaraBB You should be a reviewer for some Kentucky website or newspaper! 4y
Megabooks @BarbaraBB thank you for the vote of confidence, but I don‘t think my reviews are that good!! Also, I‘ve gotten so used to working in 451 characters, I don‘t know what I‘d do with more. 😂 4y
BarbaraBB Exactly what Gen Z wants 😂 4y
Megabooks @BarbaraBB that is so true!! 😂😂 4y
mhillis Thanks for the tag! I‘ve read an excerpt online, maybe it was in The New Yorker. Translation is fascinating. Great review! 4y
vivastory Thanks for tagging me! This sounds interesting, but I think I'd be better off waiting until I've made my way through her other work first. 4y
Megabooks @mhillis thank you! It is fascinating, and she goes a bit into some of the plays-on-words that don‘t translate exactly into English in an epilogue. 4y
Megabooks @vivastory her writing in Italian is definitely different than her writing in English. My best friend and I read all her English works together years ago, and I remember liking The Namesake best. After you‘ve finished her English works, I recommend reading her memoir about learning to live and write in Italian before you continue on. (edited) 4y
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Well-ReadNeck
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Well-ReadNeck
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

A lovely little wandering novel. Each chapter is a vignette of someplace the narrator goes in the world. The pandemic gives this a bit of a melancholy feel (when will be be able to ramble again?) As always, her writing is 💯 I love the way this author sets a scene. #ARC #Edelweiss

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ChaoticMissAdventures
Whereabouts | Jhumpa Lahiri
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Pickpick

This is one of those books that grows on you. The first few chapters (which are all about 2 pages which I normally find annoying) I was not enjoying the expanse between reader and character. But the more I read the more I understand and began to enjoy the entirety of the book. The writing is gorgeous, the main character is distant but interesting. The story flows in an original way.

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