Bone and Bread by Saleema Nawaz
House of Anansi Press
Toronto 2013
ISBN 9781770890091
Reviewed by
Ian Thomas Shaw
Remarkable. In the
currents of Canadian literature, there are few writers who can meld
the longing of the human soul with a story so believable and
engaging as Saleema Nawaz has in her debut novel Bone and Bread. Her superb
writing lures you first with grief and absence and then seduces you
by painting the mundane on a canvas of life’s small
absurdities.
Beena
and Sadhana Singh are unlikely heroines. Their parents, a
free-thinking Sikh pastry cook turned Jewish bagel shop owner and an
Irish mother who teaches yoga and dabbles in Eastern astrology,
induct their children into a world of non-conventionalism,
self-dependence and resilience. Two years apart in age, the two girls
are inseparable. The death first of their father and then of their
mother leave the sisters adrift in a world where their only relative
is “Uncle,” their father’s younger tradition-bound brother.
The lifelong bachelor is incapable of understanding the emotional
needs of his nieces, and tries unsuccessfully to inculcate them with
old world values and teach them how to be “good girls.” At
sixteen, Beena throws herself into her first love, with
eighteen-year-old Ravi Pattel, a ‘bagel boy’ in the family
business in Montreal’s multi-cultural neighbourhood of Mile End.
When Beena becomes pregnant, Ravi slips away, abetted by his upper
class Hindu parents. Even Uncle’s attempt to bribe Ravi’s family
with a sizable dowry fails to rescue Beena from single-motherhood.
While Beena drops out of school and prepares herself for the
challenges of being a teenaged parent, Sadhana, unable to overcome
the loss of her mother, descends into life-threatening anorexia.
Ironically,
both sisters find themselves in the same hospital the day that
Beena’s son, Quinn, is born. His existence fills a void in the two
sisters’ lives and restores their bond to each other. Sadhana
excels on Montreal’s vibrant theatre and art scene, attracts
to her numerous lovers and falls and recovers from serious bouts of
anorexia. Beena plods along, raises her son, moves to Ottawa to find work as a free-lance editor, and her love life is occasionally
punctuated by suitors who invariably fade away, leaving behind only
disappointment. The love of the two sisters for Quinn is the glue
that holds them together until Sadhana’s death under unexplained
circumstances. Haunted by the thought that she may have contributed
to her sister’s death, Beena returns to Montreal to piece together
the last secretive weeks of Sadhana’s life. Quinn, now 18,
accompanies his mother to Montreal, but on a quest of his own—one that will revive painful memories.
Saleema
Nawaz's Bone and Bread won on November 19, 2013 the prestigious Paragraphe – Hugh
MacLennan Prize for Fiction. She
will read on December 8, 2013 at the Magical Evening with Canadian
Authors in Montreal (Restaurant Souvenirs d’Indochine, 243
Avenue du Mont-Royal Ouest – 7 pm).
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