Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Get all the key plot points of Anita Desai's Fasting, Feasting on one page. From the creators of SparkNotes.

  2. Fasting, Feasting is a novel by Indian writer Anita Desai, first published in 1999 in Great Britain by Chatto & Windus. It was shortlisted for the Booker Prize for fiction in 1999.

  3. The best study guide to Fasting, Feasting on the planet, from the creators of SparkNotes. Get the summaries, analysis, and quotes you need.

  4. Jan 1, 1999 · Anita Desai. A wonderful novel in two parts, moving from the heart of a close-knit Indian household, with its restrictions and prejuices, its noisy warmth and sensual appreciation of food, to the cool centre of an American family, with its freedom and strangely self-denying attitudes to eating.

  5. In Fasting, Feasting Desai focuses on the children of a conservative, upper-middle-class Indian family living in a provincial town southwest of Bombay. Desai is as much interested in the family...

  6. Plain, unmarriageable Uma has failed to outgrow her childhood home, with its bittersweet treats of puri-alu and barfi. Overprotected and starved for a life, she is smothered by her overbearing parents, successful sister Aruna, and Arun, the family’s disappointment of a son.

  7. Moving from a traditional Indian household to an American one, Fasting, Feasting is a powerful exploration of hunger and plenty, and one of Anita Desais most socially acute...

  8. Anita Desai has long proved herself one of the most accomplished and admired chroniclers of middle-class India. Her 1999 novel, Fasting, Feasting, is the tale of plain and lumpish Uma and the...

  9. Jan 3, 2000 · Uma, the plain spinster daughter of a close-knit Indian family, is trapped at home, smothered by her overbearing parents and their traditions—unlike her ambitious...

  10. Jun 3, 1999 · Written by Anita Desai. Anita Desai’s intricate family drama examines the different ways in which two cultures assuage human hungers, desires and appetites. Uma, older daughter of a close-knit Indian family, remains in the household of her childhood tending to her parents’ needs.