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200 of 208 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I hate you Mistry
I walked by the homeless in the streets while growing up in a city by the sea not unlike the one in this book. I was repulsed by their grimy faces, their missing limbs, their tattered and dirty clothes. Fearful I might catch their poor people diseases if I ventured too close, I would cross the street to avoid them. Sometimes throwing coins into their tin cups from a...
Published on May 10, 2002 by windriver12

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77 of 88 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Actually 3-1/2 stars; absorbing but flawed
A Fine Balance is an absorbing, insightful, revealing, educational, and moving book. I could not put it down. Rohinton Mistry does a wonderful job of telling the the stories of the four principal characters. He provides the background of each in swift, sure strokes and then brings them together in a very credible manner.

However, credibility or the lack...
Published on September 2, 2004 by Indian music lover


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200 of 208 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars I hate you Mistry, May 10, 2002
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I walked by the homeless in the streets while growing up in a city by the sea not unlike the one in this book. I was repulsed by their grimy faces, their missing limbs, their tattered and dirty clothes. Fearful I might catch their poor people diseases if I ventured too close, I would cross the street to avoid them. Sometimes throwing coins into their tin cups from a sterile distance-sometimes missing, and walking away praising my own charity.

Thank you Mr. Mistry for showing me the other side of the story. Thank you for putting into plain and powerful words exactly how unfair life in India is to the poor and lower castes. You have taught me more than any text book could about the injustices that daily occur in India. I hate you for your brutal honesty and for making me feel this way. Or perhaps, like you prophesized in the begining of this book, I am only blaming you for my own insensitivity.

For those of you considering reading this book, here is my warning. Mistry will seduce you with his flowing words and his gripping story. He will make you feel for his characters. He will show you a side of life that millions of people bravely struggle through. And soon you will begin to fear turning the page for fear of what might happend to the characters. And rest assured, when you turn the last page, and look for some solace, you will find none. For all is true. I have seen the Shankars and Ishvars and Oms. Go to any Indian city street corner, and you will too.

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312 of 343 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing, January 9, 2002
India, a country I knew little about, haunts me since reading this book. The author captures on paper the feeling of India on every page. The sounds, the smells and the people stay with me well after the last page was turned. Unforgettable characters that evoke every type of emotion!

Rohinton Mistry meshes the lives of four people of diverse backgrounds into a bond that lasts a lifetime. The in-depth look at a culture and a people that I knew little about has brought about an understanding that I previously lacked.

Dina Dalal, widowed and determined to make it as an independent woman in a world where women have little value, becomes the unwilling glue that supports 3 other lives. Maneck Kohlah is a student, sent by his parents from his mountain village to attend school in the city. Ishvar Darji and his nephew Omprakash are tailors escaping the terror in their village by moving to the city to look for work. This unlikely group of people become dependent on each other out of necessity, their lives entangling to create the basis of the story.

This book is written with much sadness as well as humour and has touched a place in my heart. I look forward to reading more by this author in the future. Bravo!

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46 of 47 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A masterpiece, December 12, 2001
By 
Lesley West (St James, Western Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
It was with some trepidation that I read this book, as I have frequently found Indian novels to be very heavy going and full of doom and gloom, but it was recommended by someone with very good taste, and I thought I'd take the plunge. I am very glad I did - it is the finest novel of the Indian sub-continent that I have encountered.

The lives of the main characters are certainly not easy, so I guess I must confess that there is a fair share of the aforementioned doom and gloom. But our heroes are so well drawn, so fully rounded and so full of adventure and thirst for whatever life throws at them (and it throws plenty), that you get completely sucked into the complexities of their existences.

Rohinton Mistry is a fine, talented writer. The prose flows easily, and India in all of its richness and dire poverty is there before you. It is quite an experience, not always a comfortable one, sometimes very entertaining, and all in all one I thoroughly recommend.

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43 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars ONE OF THE BEST INDIAN NOVELS OF ALL TIME., January 19, 2004
You know you've read an epic novel when its 5th line had you sucked hook line and sinker. This 2-time "just missed Pulitzer" masterpiece from RM was stuck in my hands until I had it smacked down to the very last word. Immaculate piece of literature, this, you'll be an instant RM convert.

Although it's named "A Fine Balance", this novella is one of those rare gems that simply blow you out of the bubble in which you lead your life -- impervious to the extremeties around you. I found myself almost living in the world of our 4 protagonists as they go go from bouquets to brickbats. Mistry's fluent and witty language only eggs you on, I found myself amused and chuckling at many points in the book, and hard as it is to admit, I even had my eyes welled up on more occasions than I can remember.

Our protagonists are simple people, mind you. A couple of tailors, a young woman who makes her life sewing, her brother who makes it in "business". The idiosynchrasies of each character, their daily peccadiloes, the minute lens with which we are exposed to their smallest emotions, joys and fears -- as a peak into the ordinary Indian life, I simply cannot imagine a more accurate or grittier novel in recent memory.

India is indeed a country where the sinister contours of social strata (the caste system, to be specific) often seem clumsy, ominous or just plain grotesque, where deep ideological divisions feed into and exacerbate ordinary social mores. Even external dangers play themselves out domestically. A Fine Balance brims with such clear-eyed, tragicomic, Dickens-like observations of the Indian fabric.

Ingenious, wholesome, and deeply moving. Not just for Indians or people interested in India, this novel is a delight to read for ANYONE even mildly interested in literature. Highly, highly recommended!

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103 of 116 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Absolutely One Of My Favorite Books, January 5, 2002
This book is a masterpiece and it took me by surprise. This was a book that I bought and read only because it was our book club choice and THANK GOODNESS for that or I would've never read this terrific piece about history and foreign culture. Wonderful book....one Oprah's very best picks.
The writing is beautiful and brings new understanding about India's struggles with poverty and caste systems. The bittersweet cultures and traditions are displayed through this story using 4 main characters and involving many background characters to make this book so realistic that as a reader, I felt like I actually visited this country and knew the characters. I didn't always like some of the characters but I could feel their sadness, their fright, their loss and sorrow, and even their desire to make it.
I recommend everyone, yes everyone to pick this book up and read it. It is long. It is, at times, depressing. It is, at times, cruel. And there are some scenes written about that are rather crude. But all of this is needed to tell the story of India during the 70s and the changes it was going through as well as the corrupt government. Here's a book to make an American feel the privileges our country gives us, or any truely free country.
This is a book that would be great for seniors in high school to read eventhough there are some explicit and dramatic scenes written about that don't paint a very pretty picture.
And the author's writing is tremendous. Flowing with the book's activities put together in a way that makes the reader very anxious to keep reading. The use of some Indian words did slow the reading a bit for me but the story would not have felt so authentic or have such an impact without them.
This is a gem of a book. A true "travel-read" into another time and culture. It has opened my eyes to a different time and place in history and I'm very thankful it was a book club choice and that I read this book. Highly, highly recommended.
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32 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Fine Experience!, January 10, 2002
I picked up this book thinking it would be a good read similar to Vikram Seth's A Suitable Boy, but Rohinton Mistry's A Fine Balance does not only stand head and shoulders above Seth's book but puts to shame acclaimed South Asian authors such as Arundhati Roy, Jhumpa Lahiri, and Manil Suri.
Mistry's characterizations are brilliantly well-defined, especially the four main characters Ishvar and Om Darji, Dina Dalal, and Maneck Kohlah. The author has the ability to completely immerse you with their lives. You'll find yourself sympathizing with them as they try to make ends meet, laughing at their escapades and hilarious one-liners, and crying at the needlessly heavy injustices inflicted upon their lives. Through getting deeper into the story, you will find yourself developing feelings of initial indifference and skepticism, to trust and fondness for its characters - much akin to the manner in which they themselves grow close to each other.
The crazy hair collector, Monkey Man, Beggarmaster, and Shankar, despite being relatively minor characters, will undoubtably stay in your memory, thanks to their uncanny and almost satirically funny existence.
This book is not just a good read, but an experience you'll likely never forget (I'm already regretting that it's over).
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30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars No happy endings here, October 28, 2001
This review is from: A Fine Balance (Paperback)
This is a book about relationships and trust. One could cloyingly say it is about the human spirit but it is simply about 4 people, living in times that make trust nearly impossible. The characters are utterly absorbing and the descriptions of life in a caste system are compelling. It is not a happy novel, it is instead deeply disturbing. But Mistry stunningly transports his reader to this place, inside the lives of these people where you smell the smells, feel their pain, and search for a way to find meaning in their lives. This book is painful, but it deserves to be read.
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33 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars BRUTAL !, January 10, 2002
By 
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A brutal look at a country which has lost its innocence !

In 1947, there was a dream called India, a dream gone so
horribly wrong that it takes this gut-wrenching book to
awaken us - which it does with a slap to the face !

To call this book depressing is an insult to those millions
of Indians for whom life is nothing but a struggle for
survival and indeed their very survival is a triumph
against abject and crippling poverty. Reading this book
is no more depressing than the unimaginable tragedy of
their lives.

Having lived all my life in a city like Bombay, I can more
closely identify with the charecters, but their lives and
struggles have a universal appeal, because ultimately human
aspirations know no boundaries. How even the poorest of the
poor follow their pursuit of happiness in the most brutal of
circumstances is what this book is all about.

Read it and it will change your very concept of human life.

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77 of 88 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Actually 3-1/2 stars; absorbing but flawed, September 2, 2004
A Fine Balance is an absorbing, insightful, revealing, educational, and moving book. I could not put it down. Rohinton Mistry does a wonderful job of telling the the stories of the four principal characters. He provides the background of each in swift, sure strokes and then brings them together in a very credible manner.

However, credibility or the lack thereof is what finally undoes this book and accounts for my less than a top rating.

At about 150 pages from end, Mistry seems to have lost all sense of reality and piles on so many tragic events and so many coincidental recrossings-of-paths that it approaches caricature. It seems like something bad happens to everyone and then something even worse happens to each of them.

As to the coincidences, characters will be introduced, disappear, and then pop again so that Mistry can make some sort of point. Then, they will disappear and come back yet again (in a very unlikely way) so that another point can be made, albeit lamely because of the unlikeliness of the character's second reappearance in the story.

I see that some reviewers want to liken A Fine Balance to the novels of Charles Dickens, whose heroes went through an unending series of ups and downs and chance re-meetings (although Dickens' works always ended on a happy note.) However, that cannot justify Mistry's excesses. Dickens wrote his novels in a serialized form for which the up-and-down chain of events was perfectly suited. He wanted to keep his readers hooked so that they would come back for the next installment to see if the hero's luck had changed. That may have worked in Victorian England, but a lighter touch is needed today.

I have not gone into the actual details concerning my grievances because I don't want to spoil the book for the people who have not read it and who may not be as picky as I am. If Mistry had only let up on the relentless stream of tragedy at the end and eliminated certain unnecessary coincidences, he would have had a great book, rather than one that is flawed.
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21 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Painful, occassionally terrifying but beautiful book, December 5, 2001
This book brought me to a place (geographically and politically) that I had never been to before. The author created characters that are exceedinly complex, experiencing life challenges nothing like my own. Yet I came to love these characters and was both enchanted and often horrified by their world. Watching them find a reason to get up each day feeling hopeful despite their exposure to true cruelty in the world, watching them learn to trust in a culture where trust was dangerous gave me hope that we humans are capable of many things. This book is a reminder that it is not our wealth or even health that characterizes who we are, it is the quality of our relationships.
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A Fine Balance (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition)
A Fine Balance (Turtleback School & Library Binding Edition) by Rohinton Mistry (School & Library Binding - November 1, 2001)
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