The Seasons of Trouble: Life Amid the Ruins of Sri Lanka's Civil War
L**S
"truly epic proportions"
In one sentence: Well-written, balanced approach, putting a Human face to what happened in Sri Lanka. MUST read!If I didn't convince you, this got selected by NPR best books.While reading this book and looking at reviews, I didn't know how to put it. Well, Jon Lee Anderson, of "New Yorker" couldn't have said it better: "Mohan has revealed a modern tragedy of truly epic proportions. Haunting and unforgettable."Recently I watched the Independent British Channel 4 video documentary online- it holds all parties responsible:channel4.com/programmes/sri-lankas-killing-fields/on-demandAnd when I read the book my the Human Rights Activist, Dr.N.Malathy from New Zealand: My Fleeting moment the last days...I began to understand the True picture. A Fleeting Moment in My Country: The Last Years of the LTTE De-Facto State And then to read this book by this award-winning Journalist. This is a definite read for anyone seriously interested to know the Truth.Have twitter? Follow author: @rohini_mohanhope this helps?
A**L
Just take my word for it. Buy this book. Read it. Thank me later.
For some books, as you near the end you speed up as the plot comes to its inevitable conclusion, eager to find out how the story ends. For others, you slow down, not only because the themes of the book have started to intertwine around and inbetween one another, but also because you realise that soon this book will come to an end and this companion of the past few hours or days will start becoming but a memory.This is superb book. I can hardly imagine how the author managed to put it together. It reads like a novel yet feels so immediate as well.I had read Ondaatje's 'Anil's Ghost' in the past, but wasn't left with a very strong sense of Sri Lanka or its history. With this book, I feel I've learnt a lot.Just take my word for it. Buy this book. Read it. Thank me later. You'll be better of for having read it.
A**N
Mugil!
Excellent book on the human cost of the civil war in Sri Lanka.Crystalline journalistic prose sketches out the human cost of Tamils in northern Sri Lanka trapped between a violent Tamil movement that cannot sustain itself, and a violent Sinhalese government that seeks to totally eradicate ethnic resistance. Mugil the female child soldier turned mother, sister, wife is a haunting figure. It's hard to believe that she's real, and not a made-up heroine along the lines of "Girl with the Dragon Tattoo"However extraordinary times make for extraordinary tales, and you feel a mix of despair and hope for these families - repeatedly crushed in the gears of machinations far beyond their capacity of estimation.
P**A
This book puts a human face on the 30 year old civil war in Sri Lanka...
Very often, the stories we read or the movies we see about wars tell about men training for combat, crossing enemy lines etc. This book puts a human face on the 30 year old civil war in Sri Lanka. In this book Rohini Mohan tells the story of three lives, Sarva, Indra and Mugil trapped in the civil war of Sri Lanka. It is disturbing as well as provoking. This book serves as a document of the travails and troubles undergone also the follies committed by a race. It succeeded in keeping me engrossed till the last page and left me wanting to know more.....A must read.
L**T
Trouble is an understatement
My daughter is in Sri Lanka as a Fulbright scholar and recommended this book to me. It offers a somewhat sympathetic treatment of the Tamil Tigers who were declared a terrorist organization by the US and other countries. While there seem to be no good guys in the 30 year Sri Lankan civil war, the personal experiences of some of the Tamil Tigers take you inside the complex era and makes me wonder what my daughter will discover in the current society with such a violent history.
A**.
Powerful stories
I very much appreciated reading about these lives so thoroughly affected by the civil war, It almost being impossible to just be a bystander but being drawn into this conflict with the horrible consequential results. And I keep wondering what happened to Mugil. Thank you for writing this book
T**H
Book for every Tamil to read
excellent book. I was moved by the empathy,care for facts,style and quality of narration, plot and editing. The book has become close to my heart and I pray more people in India and the world read it . The misery the innocent Tamils went thru in Sri Lanka touches you and tells you how unconcerned we in India became when the world is so well connected. The story of Mugil and Sarva takes you thru the turbulent times in Sri Lanka and how people find inner reserves to survive and prevails against odds.
P**F
Crucial Read. I am glad this book was written.
I had no idea just how important this book is until I went to Sri Lanka and really saw how little people talk about the war. This book gives equal voice to participants and citizens. I am so grateful that Mohan committed the time and energy to creating such an important work that will become a seminal text for scholars as we come to understand the Civil War.
S**M
... recent civil war in Sri Lanka this is a good book to start reading about it
If you've ever been curious about the recent civil war in Sri Lanka this is a good book to start reading about it. It talks about the conflict through the lives of three characters, making the narrative relatable and very human. The author doesn't give her characters grand pretensions, and keeps them rooted in reality - Sarva's girlfriend troubles don't fade into the background when he's fleeing the country, Mugil's tension with her sister continues right till the end, and Indra's money troubles take no notice of her age or circumstance. It's a very real book and troubling that the facts narrated in it are so recent and still unresolved - Sri Lankan tamils are still negotiating their way of life and freedom as one reads this and one is left wondering about the characters long after finishing the book.
V**.
A Great Debut & A Fabulous Read!
Spoiler Alert: Nothing monumental, but please stay away if you are the kind that reads the preface AFTER the book!For the 70s and 80s children, Suicide bombing, cyanide capsule, Vanni, Kilinochchi, IPKF, Elephant Pass are are familiar jargon. We read with great interest the beginnings of the fight for Tamil ‘Eelam’ in Srilanka: how Velupillai Prabhakaran led the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) as the dominant organisation waging armed battle with the Sri Lankan government/army after eliminating other ‘freedom’ movements. Much later we read about the fall of this outfit and the ignominious end that befell its Supremo. Even as two prime ministers of the subcontinent were assassinated and our own Indian troops were on the Lankan soil, we had ambivalent feelings towards the Eelam movement. Most of us had Tamilian friends sympathetic towards it, and who would recount some daring acts of the LTTE cadre.But what we did not hear then, were the human stories. Once the crackdown of LTTE by the government forces turned into a veritable genocide following the defeat of a purpose, there were displacement & military excesses, betrayal by the cause, loss of property, lives and dignity that the Sri Lankan Tamil PEOPLE endured during the years after the strife. Rohini Mohan brings these out in her brilliant debut book, ‘The Seasons of Trouble’.Journalistic tenacity & empathetic engagement with real people appear to be trick ingredients of the author. Her choice of the point in the timeline of the conflict where the book begins is brilliant: the armed struggle against the Sinhalese establishment is past its zenith; the government has intensified its offensive against militancy & is striking at the core of Tamil identity & separatism; the LTTE leadership is crumbling; in its desperation to hold on to the Tamil dominated ‘Vanni’ (homeland), the Tigers are conscripting unwilling kids into battle, hiding behind civilian hostages hoping to avoid being fired at & are eliminating deserters; the Lankan army is teethed with cluster bombs & precision targeting and using them even against hospitals; women and children are being raped; war crimes are unchecked and the Tamil spirit is despondent. From this vantage Rohini Mohan traces the hopelessness of the three possible fates the Tamil militants, their supporters and uninvolved Tamilians faced in these times through intertwined storylines.The book has three protagonists: Mugil, a voluntary LTTE inductee as a little girl, a fierce combatant who is brought back into the battlefield after an injury-related stint in support services; Sarva, who ‘disappears’ in the opening pages suspected of his ties with the ‘Tigers’; and Indra, Sarva’s mother whose remarkable courage and undying efforts are in full display as she attempts to track Sarva and get him out of illegal detention. As Mugil’s character is introduced, we see her disillusioned resolve to desert LTTE and to rejoin her family. Between these three beautifully etched characters, Rohini Mohan explores the psyche and the severe hardships that volunteer cadres, individuals who got sucked into the conflict arena inadvertently and their hapless families went through in the period of rise & fall and eventually the decimation of LTTE. As we follow the three protagonists, Mohan peppers the book with incidents and observations about numerous other Sri Lankan tamils and their families giving us a 360-degree view of the Tamil life during the Eelam struggle and the genocide. She exposes us to the wretched lives the tamils lived, with loss of possessions & dignity, death, illness and injury, desolation and utter hopelessness during the offensive by the Sri Lankan forces as well as by the eventual ‘betrayal’ by the LTTE.The book records some history to afford perspective to those totally ignorant of the Tamil movement: the independence of Ceylon, dominance of English educated tamils, Sinhalese disenchantment, birth of variuos organisations, Rajapaksa’s Sinhala nationalism and subsequent turn of Srilankan geopolitical events. But the purpose of this book is not to document the conflict itself, but to show how conflict devastates the ordinary life and - as the author says, ‘the wreckage of civil war and the mundane omnipresence of conflict.’ There are clever insights into life during the strife expanded from observations on daily struggles: Sample this from a commentary on the value of assets in a war-torn region:‘Mother pawned her gold bracelet, two rings and her thick silver anklets. This sustained them for another two months...How easily trinkets, coins and chains could be bundled into a handkerchief and tucked into sari petticoats or underclothes. One by one, they would be pawned or sold—for utensils, an operation, some poultry or goats.’Two things about the writing technique: First is the question whether the book is fiction or non-fiction. Clearly, the characters in the book are real except that there is no <name-changed> alert, giving almost a fiction-like feel for the book. In the preface, Rohini Mohan describes her prolonged journalistic engagement with people after who the protagonists were modelled after, clarifying that it’s indeed non-fiction. What really happens to a kottiya (terrorist) in the field, in desertion, during illegal detention and flight are said in non-dramatic and realistic tone that these must have been real incidents. Yet, the style of writing is more novelistic than reportage. This gives the writer a license to approach the rigidity of facts with the freedom of fiction, something that purists would frown upon but makes reading enjoyable.Two, the author has handled the issue of the omniscient narrator with aplomb. With this technique the reader is everywhere, witnessing everything first hand and the author, unseen, unfolds everything so well without the burden of placing a POV at one angle or another. Despite that, the usual problem of inadequate reader connect with the characters in the omniscient third party narrative style has been well conquered.Two other aspects of writing impress. First, there is no over-dramatisation. In fact, if anything, Rohini Mohan has tried to be as placid as possible, in spite of the tragedy and desolation that is all around. This is no tear-jerker, except that the enormity of the happenings do tug at one’s sensibilities. Second, there isn’t much political analysis or finger-pointing. Some timelines are mentioned in between and you can figure out what went wrong for yourself.‘The Seasons of Trouble’ is a superb book, a fantastic debut, and at display are the author’s journalistic capabilities as well as a great maturity as a writer.As far as the Sri Lankan Tamil struggle is concerned it has been pushed beyond oblivion. The lessons from this crushed movement are summarised in the preface by the author: “As the world grapples with new democracies and old hate, these three lives are a grim caution. Mugil says her experience is a warning for the next marginalised group that refuses to assimilate. Sarva sees the war as a permanent obstacle to love and happiness. Indra, his mother, calls it destiny.”Rating: 4.5/5
L**I
I read these lines somewhere about the book - "Rohini ...
I read these lines somewhere about the book - "Rohini Mohan’s book digs so deep that it touches your heart—and unsettles it." These are the exact words I was searching for. I saw the tag that the book is non-fiction and I had to see it again to remind myself that it was. If I sound naive, please ignore, because when you read what all the 3 characters go through, you feel despair, hope, anxiety and what not. It took me some time to read the book as I had to step back and divert myself from the brutalities I read. I admire the will power it takes to write the book, but it must be nothing compared to the will power of the 3 and more characters whom Rohini introduces. This book is worthwhile all the way. As she put it across somewhere, the book gives a feminine touch to the SriLankan-LTTE war and its consequences. Overall, very poignant and very brave.
J**E
Ni idea tenía
Excelente libro con dos historias de la vida real narradas de gran manera. Aprendí sobre la situación de la guerra civil de Sri Lanka, pero sobre todo, de las dificultades que la gente enfrentó y que probablemente sigue enfrentando.
W**H
Excellent quality pages and good font size
Just received. Excellent quality pages and good font size. The outer covering is a wee bit worn out. Still extremely happy with the purchase.
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