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Cinnamon Gardens by Shyam Selvadurai
Cinnamon Gardens by Shyam Selvadurai







Selvadurai moves confidently among these major characters and their numerous relations and acquaintances, most of whom live in comparative luxury in the upper-class “Cinnamon Gardens” section of the city of Colombo-and are variously affected by the spirit of rebellion seeping slowly into their hitherto complacent, enclosed little world. Annalukshmi’s Uncle Balendran has been even more rigidly controlled by his father, the Mudliyar Navaratnam, a British-appointed official whose estate his son dutifully manages, 20 years after the Mudliyar had “rescued” Balendran from a homosexual relationship, steering him into marriage, and respectability. Annalukshmi Kandiah is a spirited young woman who prefers her teaching career in a mission school, and her friendships with a freethinking teacher and the latter’s ward, to her father’s plans to arrange her marriage. Selvadurai’s frustratingly lax narrative juxtaposes two personal stories of oppression and lost opportunities that reflect the experience of their homeland (“a complex society with numerous horizontal and vertical divisions”), poised between colonization by the British and separate (and opposed) religious faiths (Hindu and Tamil) and independence movements.

Cinnamon Gardens by Shyam Selvadurai Cinnamon Gardens by Shyam Selvadurai

An ambitious, often moving, but ultimately unsatisfying second novel’set in the former Ceylon in the 1920s-by the Sri Lankan-born (now Canadian) author (Funny Boy, 1996).









Cinnamon Gardens by Shyam Selvadurai