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Profound lines by diaspora authors that will stir up your nostalgia

TNN | Last updated on - Nov 22, 2017, 11:32 IST
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1/11

Profound lines by diaspora authors that will stir up your nostalgia

Home is not just a place where we reside in; it is a comfortable space where we belong. In the words of Oliver Wendell Holmes Sr., “Where we love is home, home that our feet may leave, but not our hearts.” Ever thought how would it feel to leave this comfortable space and move to a foreign land? Read these beautiful lines by Diaspora authors to know how migrating to a foreign land brings in nostalgia for the home.
Picture Credit: Pexels
2/11

Salman Rushdie

Reflecting the fluidity of identity in a foreign land, Salman Rushdie carefully weaves fiction with his personal experiences as a British Indian writer. His yearning for a comfortable space called home is clearly visible in most of his writings. The characters of his short stories in "East, West" also mirror his nostalgia for a long lost home.

Picture Credit: Picswalls

3/11

Rohinton Mistry

Rohinton Mistry's effort to strike a fine balance between his identity as an Indian and a Canadian is a major theme of most of his books. His personal struggle to adjust in a new place while holding on to the past nostalgias is identical to most of his characters.

Picture credit: Picswalls

4/11

Vladimir Nabokov

Asserting his identity as a Russian-American novelist, Vladimir Nabokov shapes his characters in a way that they reflect the Russian way of life. His debut novel "Mary", although is a story of Mary and her idea of love but symbolically it also speaks of a yearning to return to the past.

Picture Credit: Picswalls


5/11

Jhumpa Lahiri

"In other words" is a beautiful non fiction narrative by Jhumpa Lahiri that records her struggle as she tries to string words into meaningful sentences in Italian. It reflects shades of her character and her consistent longing to run back to her own known language.

Picture Credit: Picswalls

6/11

V.S. Naipaul

Born in Trinidad, V.S. Naipaul is a British writer constantly trying to reflect his roots in almost all of his works. His works reflect an idea of the past and how its memory frequently generates certain emotions in him.

7/11

Anita Desai

Despite her parental background and stay in London, Anita Desai retains her identity as an Indian author. Almost all her works capture the essence of India and the plight of Indian women. Her collection of stories, "The Artist of Disappearance" presents characters that are held by their past and the memories of it.

Picture Credit: Picswalls

8/11

Khaled Hosseini

As an Afghan-born American novelist, Khaled Hosseini uses the diasporic liberty productively to present a dreadful picture of the war in Afghanistan. He beautifully portrays his reminiscences of the home back in Afghanistan and how even the war could not ruin the idea of it. Although his first novel, "The Kite Runner" is an emotional tale of friendship and unconditional love, it also reflects Hosseini's idea of a lost home.

Picture Credit: Picswalls

9/11

Vikram Seth

<p>Closely connected with his homeland, Vikram Seth manages to retain the Indianness in his fictional works even after being settled in London. The duality of seeking isolation and a craving for home is as much relevant to him as to his characters.<br></p><p>Picture Credit: Picswalls</p>
10/11

Jhumpa Lahiri

Describing the changes involved when moving from an accustomed setting to an unaccustomed one, Jhumpa Lahiri's "Namesake" is a narration of seeking acceptance in a foreign land. As an American author with Indian roots, Jhumpa Lahiri beautifully portrays the idea of belonging to the past in almost all of her works.

Picture Credit: Picswalls

11/11

Monica Ali

An essence of the cultural uniqueness of Bangladesh is integral to almost all the works of Monica Ali. Although she immigrated to England when she was three, she retains an idea of a home back there. "Brick Lane", her debut novel beautifully captures the apprehensions of moving to a foreign land.

Picture Credit: Picswalls

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