[identity profile] wordsofastory.livejournal.com
5. The Mahabharata: a Modern Rendering by, um, it's complicated? Trditionally ascribed to Vyasa (who is also a character in the story itself), probably actually composed by multiple people at various points in time, this version translated and edited by Ramesh Menon.

The Mahabharata is one of the two major Indian epics (the other being the Ramayana), and I've been meaning to read it for ages. And I'm very happy that I've now done so! (Though I guess that means I need to read the Ramayana next.) I picked this translation off of a recommendation on this community, and though I can't compare it to any others, I did really enjoy it. It's quite long- two volumes of about 800 pages each- but it's a fantastic, compelling story, full of all kinds of awesome stuff: gods and secret identities and earth-destroying weapons and reincarnations and gender-switching and so much more!

To completely over-simplify the plot, there are two sets of cousins: the Pandavas, who consist of five brothers who are all the sons of gods, and the Kauravas, who consist of a hundred brothers who may be demons. The eldest son of each group wants to inherit the throne, and the machinations and secret assassination attempts and broken promises eventually lead to Kurukshetra and the Greatest War Ever, which causes the end of the age. My favorite characters were Amba, who holds such a grudge that she kills herself and is reincarnated as a warrior to kill her enemy; Draupadi, who marries all five of the Pandava brothers and is amazingly fierce; and Kunti, who is able to summon gods, and who uses this to sleep with them.

There's so many characters and sub-plots and side stories and so forth that it's hard to even describe the Mahabharata. But it's AWESOME, and I loved it.
[identity profile] lady-jem.livejournal.com
6. The Hundred Secret Senses, Amy Tan

A really lovely book, about a Chinese-American young woman's stormy relationship with her half-sister Kwan, who lived in China until age 18 and talks to "yin people" (spirits of people who have died).  And interwoven with the present-day story is a story Kwan tells her sister Olivia about one of Kwan's past lives, in nineteenth century China.

I started "Saving Fish from Drowning" (another Amy Tan) a while ago and I honestly couldn't get into it--this book I loved, and I found it really easy to read, more so the further through it I got, until the other night when I stayed up way past when I should have turned out the light.

Very recommended.

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