Can magical beings live an ordinary" existence when they're not off saving the world? Can inherent nature evolve? What's the best way to embrace a new culture without forgoing the old or losing one's place in the world? What is the extent to which community, especially a like-minded one, matters? Can fundamental differences ever be overcome enough through equally strong and connective similarities?
Helene Wecker contends with these weighty questions and more in her Mythopoeic Award-winning debut novel, The Golem and the Jinni, and its sequel, The Hidden Palace.
Part rich historical fantasy in turn-of-the20th-century New York, part adult folktale synthesising Jewish and Arab culture, part literary fiction contending with the immigrant experience, Wecker manages to make it all feel simultaneously expansive and intimate. I ask her why she chose fantasy, and why the themes of alienation and identity are so central to her books.
“As the granddaughter of Holocaust survivors, displacement and immigration were a huge undercurrent of my childhood [...] in my mind, all families came from somewhere else, somewhere that wasn't America," she says.
The write way
This story is from the February 06 , 2022 edition of Brunch.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the February 06 , 2022 edition of Brunch.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Nitesh Kumar
Para badminton athlete, Nitesh_Kmar
With you, in dispirit
We're not fully over all the things and people that let us down this year. Here are 10 from the naughty list
Zero in on the meaning
Gunjan Chawla Kumar's Sifr series is meditative and repetitive. It shows that something can come from nothing
An attitude of gratitude
There's so much to be grateful for. But take a close look back at the year that's passed and celebrate how far you've come
Thai until you succeed
Thai cuisine flourished after non-Thai chefs took it to the world. Now, two new top-class restaurants are run by Indians
IYKYK
The year's done, the data is in, we've Wrapped, unboxed and unpacked what we could. Were you really paying attention to all the drama of 2024? Find out here. Answers on Page 27
The getaway without the trip
Cut the clutter, add details, and dim the lights. Here are the best hacks for making your home feel like a luxury retreat
When every buddy wins
Why force a single friend to fit every definition of BFF? A circle of besties isn't betrayal, it's a sign of growing up and spreading the love
This week, we're...
Faking a flex. If you have FOMO about concerts, you’re the right market for Get Your Flex. The Insta-based service sells concert video footage, so customers can pretend that they were at the Maroon 5 gig, or paid ₹30,000 for Dil-Luminati seats. For ₹99, you can also be tagged in a concert video by a cool “friend”, or get a clip that you can repost. Now, if there’s more buzz online than at the venue, you know why.
Man of the moments
Sunil Chhetri has retired from football, but he's not done yet. The 40-year-old legend talks about the moments that defined his careerand why his biggest achievement is off the field