always in fun

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Sunday, 14 November 2010

"Saffron Dreams" A Book About Letting Go

Posted on 09:06 by john mycal
5 stars

"Saffron Dreams," is about letting go and learning to live despite every challenge life brings.  It's about the strength of women and relationships.  It's about the experience of women left behind in the 9/ll Twin Towers/World Trade Center terrorist attack.  And, it's about the Muslim woman's experience in America.  It's also about what immigrants have to leave behind and let go of when they choose to become a part of a new country and people.    ...a letting go to gain something else of value.

Ms Abdullah has a big order to fill, and she comes shining through like a bird of paradise!  I loved this book for so many reasons, it will be difficult to convey them to you, so you'll ultimately just have to read the book for yourself to understand.  I had to keep reminding myself that it was a novel and not a memoir...looking back again and again at the gorgeous cover and searching the eyes of the beautiful Pakistani woman for clues of the inner soul of such a writer.

The main character, Arissa, is a young woman who was born and raised in Karachi, Pakistan. After having survived a home of material wealth and non-existent maternal love, Arissa becomes wed in a traditional "arranged marriage."  Surprisingly, this marriage is to a young man she had previously met on a trip to New York visiting relatives!  Fortune seemed to be with them from the beginning.  On the flip side of that fortune, however, rests a bad omen flung at them by a seer woman who predicts that the young husband will dance with fire.  Arissa and Faizan also have dreams of flames and smoke, but set these things aside and ignore them.  Of course, these omens find their fulfillment as Faizan is killed in the 9/11 World Trade Center attack.

We learn along the way such interesting information as Muslim life in the everyday workings of the kitchen cookery (recipes are included), the different meanings of the veils the women wear, the landscape and gardens of Pakistan, and the role saffron plays in the life of Arissa. I will never look at or smell Night Blooming Jasmine in quite the same way again.  Arissa is an artist, writer, observer of the world, and faithful woman.  Her agony is quietly and honestly shared with us.

Ms Abdullah knows grief and heartbreak.  Her novel tells us truly the pain of loss and the redemptive qualities that keep one living despite them.  I was widowed at a young age with young children so I speak from experience, when I say that this book conveys the feelings and experiences I had so profoundly and gently that it was shocking to me.  I was moved by Ms Abdullah's gift for giving life to her characters.
I learned that women and widows are the same no matter what their religion or culture.  I learned that not all Muslims are terrorists. I knew that children can save you, but was delighted to see that Arissa found that gift.  That family can hold you up but can't save you.  It was good to know that somebody else unknown to you can have the same experiences and live to tell about it.  

 Please do yourself a favor and read this wonderful book.  It will help you know how it feels to be a widow of the 9/11 attack....  It is a gorgeous and poetic book with an abundance of truth and beauty for everyone who loves fine literature.

Your Bookish Dame
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to Facebook
Posted in General Fiction | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • "Clarity" ~ YA Book
    GoodReads Summary: "When you can see things others can't, where do you look for the truth? This paranormal murder mystery will hav...
  • My Response: Wall St. Journal Bookshelf~YA Fiction "Darkness Too Visible"
    On June 4, 2011, The Wall Street Journal~Bookshelf section published an article by Meghan Cox Gurdon entitled: " Darkness Too Visible:...
  • Gene Splicing YA Fiction: "Tankborn" by Karen Sandler
    Publisher: TU Books of Lee & Low Books Inc. Pages: 384 Release Date: October 2011 Genre:  YA Fiction/Dystopian/Sy-Fy What They're Sa...
  • A Thanks to Publishers, Authors & Followers
    Because it's Thanksgiving, but actually because it gives me a good excuse to let them know, I'd like to extend my gratitude to the f...

Categories

  • abandonment
  • Adriana Trigiani
  • Alexandra Monir
  • Alicia Rasley
  • Amy Efaw
  • Andrea Cremer
  • Animals
  • Anita Shreve
  • Anjali Banerjee
  • Ann Aguirre
  • Anne Rice
  • art theft
  • art work
  • artist
  • Austen mashups
  • Author Interview
  • Author Jodi Picoult
  • Author Joyce Carol Oates
  • B.A. Chepaitis
  • backwoods
  • Beatrix Potter
  • Bernadette Pajer
  • best books of 2011
  • Beth Kephart
  • Bette Davis
  • Blair Richmond
  • Blog Related
  • Book Review
  • Books
  • Brenna Yoranoff
  • C.W. Gortner
  • Cameron Stracher
  • Cancer
  • Caragh M. O'Brien
  • Carole Waterhouse
  • Caroline Kennedy
  • cathedral
  • Cathy Mazur
  • celebrities
  • celebrity photos
  • Charlie Price
  • Chevy Stevens
  • Children's Book
  • Christmas
  • Classics
  • Classics and Mashups
  • Coffee
  • Colin Firth
  • colors
  • controlling mothers
  • cookbook
  • Cormac McCarthy
  • Cornelia Funke
  • crafts
  • Craig Stephan
  • Current Events
  • Cynthia Rogers Parks
  • D.E. Johnson
  • Daisy Goodwin
  • Daniel Woodrell
  • Danielle Trussoni
  • Darcy and Lizzy
  • Darien Gee
  • dead people
  • Deborah Lawrenson
  • Denise Mina
  • detectives
  • DL Fowler
  • Dogs
  • Duane Swierczynski
  • dying
  • dystopian
  • Elizabeth Bennett
  • Elizabeth Naughton
  • Ellie James
  • emery lee
  • Emma Thompson
  • Erin Morgenstern
  • Europe
  • family dynamics
  • fantasy
  • father abandonment
  • fears
  • Film Noir
  • forensics
  • Gail Giles
  • Galley Cat
  • Gary McMahon
  • General
  • General Fiction
  • ghosts
  • gifts
  • Giveaway
  • goodreads
  • Gothic
  • Gothic fiction
  • Greg Kiser
  • Grief
  • Hachette Publishing Group
  • hair story
  • Halloween
  • Harper Collins
  • heaven
  • Hemingway
  • Heroine
  • historical fiction
  • historical Japan
  • Hoarding
  • home and garden
  • horror
  • humor
  • illustrated book
  • indie lit awards
  • interior design
  • interview
  • Inzanesville
  • Iolanthe Woulff
  • James Feinstein
  • Jane Austen
  • Jane Rowan
  • Japanese art
  • Jewish culture
  • Jo Ann Beard
  • Joely Sue Burkhart
  • Jonathan Franzen
  • Journalism
  • Joyce Hostetter
  • Karen Russell
  • Karen Sandler
  • Karl Friedrich
  • Kate Atkinson
  • Katherine Spencer
  • Kathleen Kent
  • Kathryn Casey
  • Kathryn Stockett
  • Kathy Reichs
  • Kelly Jones
  • Kevin Henkes
  • Kim Harrington
  • knitting
  • Kristi Cook
  • L.A. Banks
  • laughter
  • Lauren DeStafano
  • Lauren Myracle
  • Leslie Esdile Banks
  • Literary Heroine
  • living dead doll
  • Lois Lowry
  • lost family
  • lost family members
  • love connections
  • Malinda Lo
  • Manet
  • Manhattan Project
  • Marcia Clark
  • margaret george
  • Maria Duenas
  • Maria Lucia
  • marriage
  • Mary Carter
  • Maryann Lin
  • Meg Mitchell Moore
  • Megan Abbot
  • Melissa Foster
  • Memoirs and Non-Fiction
  • Memoirs and Other
  • Michael David Lukas
  • Michael Koryta
  • Michelle Hoover
  • Michelle Zink
  • Midnight Dragonfly series
  • Moroccan
  • motherhood
  • Mr. Darcy
  • Mrs. Darcy
  • mystery
  • Nazi
  • New Mexico
  • New Orleans
  • News
  • NH
  • Nicole Krauss
  • Oppenheimer
  • Ozarks
  • palm reading
  • paranormal
  • Paula Brackston
  • Paula McLain
  • Pemberley
  • Penguin Group
  • Pete Hamill
  • Peter Rabbit
  • photos
  • Poetry
  • Polio
  • predators
  • Pride and Prejudice
  • Provence
  • psychological novel
  • psychology
  • psychosis
  • Rachel Simon
  • Ransom Riggs
  • rape
  • Reading
  • Reading Challenge
  • recommendations
  • Regan Black
  • Regency
  • reviews
  • Richard Barager
  • Richelle Mead
  • Rick Harrison
  • Robb Forman Dew
  • Sam Hilliard
  • scary
  • Sci-Fi
  • seer
  • Sensory Processing Disorder
  • Shephardic family
  • shoes
  • short stories
  • Siddahartha Mukherjee
  • Stacy Cohen
  • Starbucks
  • steampunk
  • Steve Piacente
  • supernatural
  • Susan Beth Pfeffer
  • Suspense
  • Suspense Thrillers
  • T.K. Varenko
  • T.L. James
  • Tanya Plank
  • Tara Hudson
  • teen aged dangers
  • therapy
  • TLC Book Tours
  • Tom McNeal
  • Vampires
  • Video
  • Vietnam
  • WASPs
  • werewolves
  • women in art
  • women pilots
  • Women Writers
  • woods
  • Writing
  • WWII
  • YA fiction
  • yarns

Blog Archive

  • ►  2011 (188)
    • ►  December (15)
    • ►  November (19)
    • ►  October (26)
    • ►  September (33)
    • ►  August (18)
    • ►  July (18)
    • ►  June (14)
    • ►  May (10)
    • ►  April (14)
    • ►  March (13)
    • ►  February (2)
    • ►  January (6)
  • ▼  2010 (29)
    • ►  December (11)
    • ▼  November (16)
      • Swallow...Pleazzzzze!!!
      • Versatile Blogger Award ~~ A First For My New Blo...
      • "Not Just Spirited" (Sensory Processing/Integratio...
      • Southern Writers and the Okra Picks Challenge
      • Miami Book Fair 2010 Spectacular Event!
      • The New Dork Review of Books: The Top Five Sins of...
      • Jane Austen Readers Attention!! New Reading Chal...
      • Not Interested in Readings
      • "Theodosia..." A Nancy Drew on Ritalin for Booki...
      • "Saffron Dreams" A Book About Letting Go
      • "Look Again" by Lisa Scottoline ~ And Freebie!
      • "The Widower's Tale" ~~ From a former widow's pers...
      • Books I Want To Read Before the New Year!!
      • Snakewoman~~ Bet you thought you'd never find out ...
      • "The Wife's Tale: A Novel," by Lori Lansens
      • "Breaking Dawn" as it Dawned on Me.....
    • ►  October (2)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

john mycal
View my complete profile