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A History of Burning
A History of Burning | Janika Oza
11 posts | 7 read | 12 to read
An immersive, kaleidoscopic debut for fans of Homegoing and Pachinko: one family's search for a better life through four continents, four generations and a century of change At the turn of the twentieth century Pirbhai, a teenage boy, is taken from his village in India and travels perilously across the sea to labour on the East African railroad for the British. There, he is given a ruthless order. Following it will ensure his survival. But it will also torment him and reverberate across his family's future for decades to come. During the waning days of British colonial rule, and as Uganda moves towards independence and military dictatorship, Pirbhai's children and grandchildren come of age in a divided nation. In 1972, when Idi Amin's brutal regime expels the Ugandan Asians, the family has no choice but to flee. In the chaos, they leave something devastating and unexpected behind. As Pirbhai's grandchildren find their way back to each other in exile in Toronto, a letter arrives that will stoke the flames of the fire that haunts the family. It makes each generation question how far they are willing to go, and who they are willing to defy, in order to secure their own place in the world. A History of Burning is an unforgettable tour de force, an intimate family saga of complicity and resistance, about the stories we share, what remains unspoken and the eternal search for home.
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Lindy
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Pickpick

Told in various POVs over 4 generations of a Gujarati family, this compelling saga begins with 13-year-old Pirbhai in 1898—who‘s kidnapped from his home in India to work on British railway construction in Africa—& ends with his great-grandson Hari protesting police brutality on the streets of Toronto in 1992. In between, much drama! Including expulsion from the new Pakistan in 1947 & from Uganda in 1972, plus many difficult choices along the way.

Lindy The audiobook is excellent: read by Lipica Shah and KP Upadhyayula. 7mo
36 likes1 comment
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Lindy
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The heat was a pulsing, living thing, the sky god-skin blue.

TrishB I thought this was an excellent read- if heart breaking too. 7mo
Lindy @TrishB Yes, I found it excellent too. I had put off reading it until I was emotionally prepared for the content. 7mo
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BookishTrish
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Pickpick

An absorbing family story that takes us to several continents and different tumultuous times. All the characters felt like real people.

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TrishB
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Things never get any better for displaced refugees do they? This is a very sad and melancholy read, all the injustices that history put on the generations of the family in this. Leaves me with a heavy heart and will the world ever be at peace thoughts.
An excellent read though.

BarbaraBB Great review. 13mo
squirrelbrain Great review - not one I‘ve read yet, but it‘s been on my radar for a while. 13mo
TrishB @BarbaraBB @squirrelbrain a really good read. 13mo
88 likes3 stack adds3 comments
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Lunakay
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Pickpick

This story captured me from the very beginning, moved me to tears several times and left me with lots to think about. The characters are vivid and following them through their whole life spans was quite the experience.

There were rumours it might be nominated for the Booker, which it wasn't. I read 2 of the actual nominations and none of them come close 🤔

Highly recommended, 4,5 🌟

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charl08
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Wonderful novel exploring a family's history across three continents. Over 300 pages but I would have happily kept reading (something I don't often say!)

Wondering if it will get a #Booker23 nod.🤞

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charl08
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Wherever Mayuri turned she saw someone she knew, every inhale heavy with perfume and incense. The circles of revellers danced around the clay lantern burning at the centre of the room, a flurry of pinks and greens and sequins, dark hair and brown limbs. Though everyone danced on Navratri, it was the women who had always drawn Mayuri's eye, alive and radiant as on no other night...

Image via newindianexpress.com

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Mpcacher
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Pickpick

This is a riveting family saga that deals with survival, resistance, racism & parenting. Set mostly in Uganda and Toronto, it represents what I love best about historical fiction, being both entertaining and educational, especially about life under Idi Amin. While I was slightly disappointed in the vagueness of ending, I still really enjoyed the book and the vast cast of wonderful characters and look forward to more by this debut author. 4/5!

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TheKidUpstairs
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Here's my nominations for #CampLitsy23 🎉🏕 One is tagged, I'll tag the rest in the comments.

Excited to see everyone's ideas! Thanks for hosting @Megabooks @squirrelbrain @BarbaraBB

See All 12 Comments
Ruthiella Wow! Love it! Every book is new to me. 🤩 2y
JamieArc Thanks for tagging your nominations! 2y
Chelsea.Poole Oohhh love these! I‘m interested in VenCo. 2y
Cinfhen 6 books that were not on my #ReadersRadar - awesome 😎 2y
BarbaraBB A new Paul Harding! Thanks for nominating! 2y
squirrelbrain Nearly every book new to me too…( I had read about the Paul Harding) - great list! 2y
Megabooks Same @Cinfhen ! Very excited to check these out! 2y
65 likes12 comments
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Rhondareads
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So excited to read this book a sweeping debut novel that takes us through four generations of a family in the twentieth century on the eternal quest for home.Thanks @grandcentralpub for this book by Janika Oza