BookRags.com Literature Guides Literature Guides Criticism/Essays Criticism/Essays Biographies Biographies My Bibliography Periodic Table U.S. Presidents Shakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up
Research Anything:        
History | Encyclopedias | Films | News | Create a Bibliography | More... Login | Register | Help
Not What You Meant?  There are 9 definitions for Diamond dust.

Search "Desai, Anita 1937–: Critical Essay by Ben Okri"

Criticism Navigation
 

Desai, Anita 1937–: Critical Essay by Ben Okri

Print-Friendly  Order the PDF version  Order the RTF version
About 1 pages (308 words)
Anita Desai Summary

Bookmark and Share

Silence is clarity and white heat in Anita Desai's Clear Light of Day, a novel about a family reunion, its unease, the disturbing remembrances that accompany it. Tara, now married to a diplomat, revisits her childhood home in Old Delhi and finds that, on the shabby surface, nothing has changed. The mind is forced back into rites of childhood. Anita Desai evokes the heat, the parrots squawking, the changes and nonchanges of characters, their subtle secret movements, and in her evocations is discovery….

But often the vividness of the writing fails to convey a sense of the child's actual life: the vividness is literary. Anita Desai has a pointillist exactitude, conveys the lucency of things sharply sensed in the clear light of day, but lacks apprehension of their depths. Some shadows are clearly missing….

This is a free excerpt of 133 words. There are 308 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) in the full critical essay.

Read the rest of this Criticism with our Desai, Anita 1937–: Critical Essay by Ben Okri Access Pass.

Copyrights
Desai, Anita 1937–: Critical Essay by Ben Okri from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.

Join BookRagslearn moreJoin BookRags


About BookRags | Customer Service | Report an Error | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy