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Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line

LONGLISTED FOR THE WOMEN'S PRIZE 2020 (Sprache: Englisch)
 
 
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'A moving and confident novel about the preciousness of life' Nikesh Shukla

'A brilliant debut' (Ian McEwan) picked as one to watch by the Guardian, Vogue and Stylist

**One of the Observer's 10 best debut novelists of 2020**

Three weeks ago I...
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Bestellnummer: 128054308

Buch (Kartoniert) 17.20
Dekorierter Weihnachtsbaum
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Kommentar zu "Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line"
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    3 von 7 Kunden fanden diese Bewertung hilfreich

    Miss.mesmerized, 16.03.2020

    When Bahadur, one of his classmates, goes missing, nine-year-old Jai is determined to solve this case. He has watched so many episodes of Police Patrol that he knows exactly how such a problem is to be treated. Together with his friends Pari and Faiz, he starts to investigate around Purple Line and Bhoot Bazaar. Yet, more and more children and teenagers disappear from their basti and quite obviously, the police are not willing to do anything about it. The parents get either more and more afraid of their children being the next or angry as they feel helpless and powerless.

    Deepa Anappara’s novel is a brilliant mixture of an oftentimes very funny plot and an absolutely serious topic. Daily, children go missing on Delhi’s streets without anybody taking notice of it. The life of a child, especially if she or he belongs to a minority, is worth next to nothing, not even the effort to take a note on it. Diverse cultures and religious racism play an important role in this, too. Boys and girls are treated differently and offered different chances in life. Born into the wrong family, you can only count on superstition for a better life since the boundaries are clearly set.

    At the beginning of the novel, I totally adored Jai and his friends. They are vividly and wonderfully portrayed. Determined to find out what happened to their friend and equipped with their knowledge from true crime TV series, they start their investigation ignoring all warnings against the dangers that lurk around the bazaar. They take their job very serious and at the same time, just as kids do, ignore the facts that they live in the same slum but come from very different backgrounds.

    With the number of children who disappear rising, the novel becomes increasingly serious and loses the light-heartedness of the beginning. The way a slum works becomes gradually more visible and thus, the novel grants insight in a world which is totally unknown to me.

    The whole novel is sparkling with life, the characters are quite unique and lovable and it is totally understandable why the novel has been nominated on the longlist for the Women’s Prize for Fiction 2020.

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