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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Accident, A New Medium of Communication, A Widower's Waking, September 26, 2007
This review is from: The Blue Taxi: A Novel (Hardcover)
A prophetic embroidress, an ice cream king, an aspiring entrepreneur, an affair: the world of Vunjamguu, East Africa, shifts in whispers. BiBi, the embroidress, notes, "It was one thing saying bravely she would take up any vision and another to commit to stitching it, in full view of her own household." N.S. Koening's Blue Taxi is not only beautifully embroidered, but also committed to rendering the difficulties of individuals as they struggle to reconcile their desires/dreams despite social and economic circumstance, as they commit (or don't commit)to their vision in full view of the larger household of Vunjamguu.

Told by a narrator who carries stories between houses and cross town, The Blue Taxi invites readers to witness the private hopes, the strengths, and the insecurities of Sari, BiBi, Majid, Gilbert, and Nisreen (among others)in the post-colony.

If you appreciate the work of Marquez, Coetzee, Zadie Smith, Eugenides, or Soyinka, you will appreciate this book. If you are unfamiliar with these authors, but searching for a beautiful and saavy story that recognizes the difficulties of love as inextricable from the the difficulites of the society that love inhabits, you will be grateful for N.S. Koenings's vision.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars mesmerizing, inspiring literature, October 23, 2007
This review is from: The Blue Taxi: A Novel (Hardcover)
N.S. Koenings has created a remarkable story that challenges readers to examine assumptions about place, gender roles, the politics of colonialism and cultural practices. Using exquisite language - like that of Nabokov's Lolita and Ondaatje's The English Patient - she tells the story of subordinated housewife Sarie Turner's attempt, in 1970's Africa, to become a full person in clear command of her actions. Every passage is full of evocative imagery, longing and vision. Like many of the other characters, Sarie Turner suffers because of society's expectations. Due to the inability of those around her to imagine a world other than what they have come to expect, she loses her autonomy and her chance at respectful, transformative relationships. The book's narrator believes that the imagination can transform the world - but that such transformation takes hard work and dedication. This is a captivating and beautifully written book, one that must be read!
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5.0 out of 5 stars beautiful novel, May 24, 2011
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This review is from: The Blue Taxi: A Novel (Hardcover)
Highly recommended. The Blue Taxi is a beautiful and beautifully written novel. It is utterly transporting--the reader is captured and whisked away to another time and place. The characters are remarkably vivid, and I find myself thinking of them long after finishing the book. I eagerly await more from NS Koenings!
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4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars fascinating historical look at 1970s Africa, October 28, 2006
This review is from: The Blue Taxi: A Novel (Hardcover)
In Vunjamguu East Africa, a drunk driver hits a young boy. Raised in a mission hospital, Belgium expatriate Sarie Turner tries to stop the child's bleeding with a tourniquet while her daughter Agatha holds the lad's severed leg. Everyone in the small town is shocked by the tragedy, but especially stunned is Sarie, who feels like an outsider with the locals and especially with her British husband Gilbert and his social climbing peers.

Sarie feels a need to visit the injured child Tahir recuperating in the hospital. So in spite of Gilbert demanding she should not, she and Agatha visit the lad. There Sarie meets his distressed father, the widower Majid Jeevanjee. Though he is a Muslim, Majid and Sarie find a kindred spirit in one another and she soon seduces him while Gilbert panics that his "sponsor" Uncle James will abandon him without a pound so he tries to persuade Majid to forge a business partnership.

THE BLUE TAXI is a historical look back to the 1970s when many African nations were struggling between an affluent decadent colonial upper class and the vast impoverished natives. The story line cleverly uses its characters to represent differing, often in conflict, groups. Though more a cerebral tale with little action, fans who enjoy a fascinating historical with a deep symbolic cast will want to read THE BLUE TAXI.

Harriet Klausner
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The Blue Taxi: A Novel
The Blue Taxi: A Novel by N. S. Köenings (Hardcover - October 17, 2006)
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