| A Review of: A House By the Sea by W.P. KinsellaA House By the Sea may be the most complicated novel of the year.
The story spans four continents with umpteen characters from a
number of generations. Zahra, a thirtish young woman is the narrator.
However, long dead relatives sometimes leap to the fore to tell
their tales of immigration, alienation, and tragedy. Zahra, named
for a grandmother she never knew, a woman family history relates
as having drowned when she was 12 years old, longs to the title
House by the Sea, a house located in Zanzibar, that has passed
through a succession of owners, and is about all that remains
unmarred of her family affairs, after all the secrecy and betrayals
and subterfuge have been laid aside. Or so she thinks. The story
leaps from present to past and back again. Zahra, who lives in
London, visits her parents in Zanzibar, which triggers memories and
tales of the lives of her parents, and grandparents on both sides
of the family. When one has two Zahras, a Zeenat, plus Zoraine
born Zubaida, Zureya born Zabeen, and Zera born Zarina, all in
Zanzibar one comes close to throwing up their hands in utter
confusion. But the story is ultimately worth the sorting out. Though
Zahra the narrator is not terribly interesting and a little whiny,
the colorful and eccentric characters in her family make up for
what she lacks. Not only are characters not who they seem to us,
but they are sometimes not who they think they are. The language
is luscious, the descriptions so intense one can almost taste the
food being served and take in the many exotic odors. Zahra's desire
not only for a room of her own but for an entire house is what turns
the wheels of this occasionally cumbersome but ultimately rewarding
novel.
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