"Boundary" - A Short Story by Jhumpa Lahiri- from her collection Roman Stories - 2023
At the same time I wonder what they know about the loneliness here. What do they know about the days, always the same, in our dilapidated cottage? The nights when the wind blows so hard the earth seems to shake, or when the sound of rain keeps me awake? The months we live alone among the hills, the horses, the insects, the birds that pass over the fields? Would they like the harsh quiet that reigns here all winter? “ from “The Boundary”
Jhumpa Lahiri is universally acknowledged as one of the greatest of contemporary authors. So far I have read and posted upon these of her books:
Interpreter of Maladies 1999 A Collection of Short Stories, Pulitzer Prize Winner
The Name Sake 2003
Unaccustomed Earth 2008 A Collection of Short Stories
The Lowland 2013
The Clothing of Books - a nonfiction work on book jackets
Additionally I have read and posted on eight of her short stories, mostly in The New Yorker besides those in her two collections.
Jhumpa Lahiri first wrote “The Boundary” in Italian, then translated it into English ( the link above includes a discussion of her involvement with Italian and her life in Rome). There is no geographic setting given in the story so I decided it was set in the hills of Tuscany, or my version was. The narrator is a late teenage girl. She lives with her parents. Her father is the caretaker at an estate. Her mother takes care of a sick man. The owner, a wealthy foreigner rarely visits. (They live in a small house.: When he does he rides horses during the day and reads at night. In the summer time, the main house is rented out. The narrator takes care of getting the house ready and making sure the visitors have what they need.
The girl and her family are foreigners, just like the visitors. We don’t learn where they are from but we do learn the narrator feels out of place in school as she “looks different”. We learn something shocking and heartbreaking as the story closes. It made me rethink my experience of the story.
I was able to obtain this collection via a Florida library through the Libby Application
This turned out to be one of my favourite stories in the collection, although I enjoyed it all the way through. I find it fascinating that she writes in Italian now. And, here, I thought how the girl views her surroundings and, then, how she views the way the wife views them, really thought-provoking. How we all take our immediate surroundings for granted. How whether or not we consider ourselves to be "at home" in them influences our response to the core.
ReplyDeleteBuried in Print. So far I have read only this Story hopefully I can finish the collection soon. Thanks for your thoughts
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