Silent Winds, Dry Seas | Vinod Busjeet
The beauty of Busjeet's splendid, often breathtaking book is, like the best stories of journeys to young adulthood, the precious and well-observed and heartbreaking details of day-to-day life. Edward P. Jones, Pulitzer Prize winning author of The Known World Vinod Busjeet's sweeping debut novel explores the intimate struggle for independence of a young Hindu boy in Mauritius, a small island under British colonial rule in the Indian Ocean. For readers of Akhil Sharma, V. S. Naipaul, and Moshin Hamid. In the 1950s, Vishu Bhushan is a young boy yet to learn the truth beyond the rumors of his family's fractured histories--an alliance, as his mother says, of two bankrupt families. In evocative chapters, the first two decades of Vishnu's life in Mauritius unfolds with heart wrenching closeness as he battles his ambition to experience the world beyond, and the cultural, political, and familial turmoil that hold on to him. Through gorgeous and precise language, Silent Winds, Dry Seas conjures the spirit and rich life of Mauritius, even as its diverse peoples suffer under harsh colonial rule. Weaving the soaring hopes, fierce love, and heart-breaking tragedies of Vishnu's proud Mauritian family together with his country's turbulent battle to gain independence, Busjeet masterfully evokes the epic sweep of history in the intimate moments of a boy's life. Silent Winds, Dry Seas is a poetic, powerful, and universal novel of identity and place, of the systemic brutalities of colonialism, and of what a family will sacrifice for its children to thrive.