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Paperback All the Fishes Come Home to Roost: An American Misfit in India Book

ISBN: 1594865264

ISBN13: 9781594865268

All the Fishes Come Home to Roost: An American Misfit in India

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Book Overview

When she was seven, Rachel Manija Brown's parents, post-60s hippies, uprooted her from her native California and moved to an ashram in a cobra-ridden, drought-stricken spot in India. Cavorting through... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Has become one of my favorite books

"All the Fishes Come Home to Roost: An American Misfit in India" is Rachel Manija Brown's enchanting chronicle of growing up in an ashram in India. In 1980, when she was 7, her hippie parents moved her with them from Los Angeles, Calif., to Ahmednagar, India, to worship a deceased Indian guru named Baba, whom they referred to as "God." (Baba's the one who coined the phrase "Don't worry, be happy.") In Ahmednagar, she tells us, "the seasons consisted of Unpleasantly Hot, Unbearably Hot, and for two months every few years, Soaking Wet." Her parents sent her to a Catholic school, where she was forced to endure punishment at whim from the sadistic, "ruler-wielding nuns." Add to that the unending poverty in India and the constant dangers from the hostile environment - including king cobras - and there was plenty for a young girl to find disagreeable. Brown describes her travels with her parents around the countryside and introduces us to the eccentric disciples of Baba and their bizarre rituals. She talks about Indian religion and history and has an interesting insight into Hindu mythology. I identified with the young girl who, from a very early age, found companionship in books. In the funny coming-of-age memoir, she reveals honest feelings: "I took malicious pleasure in things that freaked out Mom. It was nothing personal. I would have also enjoyed things that freaked out Dad, except that nothing ever did." It reads like a novel because of her easy writing style, and she often comes up with strange but lovely phrasing, as when, after a big rain, she says, "The air smelled of fresh water that is still but not stagnant, a green smell touched with blue." She made me laugh out loud, and several times I audibly gasped at the surprising, even shocking, events. It has instantly become one of my favorite books. As soon as I?finished it, I wanted to call the author and thank her. Visit www.rachelmanijabrown.com and you can read the first chapter. Brown's account of her family's vacation at a hill station reminded me of "The Great Hill Stations of Asia" by Barbara Crossette. In that travel book, the author visited hill stations - basically, a throwback to colonial times - which are resorts built atop mountains to let the people find relief from the constant heat and humidity of the plains.

Unstoppable Read

Sometimes cliches come true. I simply couldn't put this book down. I had laundry to put away, chores to do, and kept saying "Just one more chapter." I'm slightly internet acquainted with the author, so when the book came out I bought it here, to support someone I "know" -- an interesting and increasing phenomenon -- and then let it sit on the shelf for several weeks. Yesterday afternoon I picked it up as I was cleaning the house, and read the first chapter. And was riveted. Brown's eye for detail, her use of language, her humor and candour make this a pleasurable read. The circumstances she describes make it gripping. I'd cruise along, snickering at the eccentricity of the people around her, and then be stopped in my tracks, sometimes by horror at the things she and the children around her endured at school, and sometimes by the beauty she managed to find in a distinctly un-beautiful landscape. What struck me in retrospect, after reading comments here and elswhere on the net, was something I didn't really recognize as I read it, though it was in front of my eyes. Brown doesn't ridicule the people who surrounded her at the ashram, she views them with the ruthless logic of a child, and all the while looks at the adults around her with the unspoken question "Don't you people see that this is seriously screwy? Is it just me?" The question is there in the book -- Brown was clear from the start that she got that things were skewed and that the adults didn't get it -- but I didn't recognize the voice and mindset of that questioning until I thought back. Brown was a rational seven year old set down in a completely irrational situation. That she was able, twenty or so years later, to write about it with humor as well as horror is a testament to her resilience. This is an unforgettable read. Highly, highly recommended.

Beyond Funny - Loved it.

I just couldn't put the book down. I consider this one of the best books I've ever read and certainly one of the funniest. Rachel is obviously insightful as well as brilliant. I plan to buy a few more to give away as Christmas gifts.

Funny and wise

This book has everything one could hope for in a memoir: information, entertainment, and enlightenment. The author's childhood in remote India would be horrifying in anybody else's telling; she manages to make it both horrifying and funny. Unlike many modern memoirists, the author manages to come to some peace with her past and with her family.

Hilarious, poignant memoir of growing up in an Indian ashram

Brown wreaks a cathartic revenge on her self-involved hippie parents in this mordant, laugh-out-loud memoir of her formative years in an ashram in India. She was a precocious seven when her parents announced they were moving from Los Angeles to backwater Ahmednagar. It was there that the guru they had been devoted to since their drugged-out Berkeley college days, Meher Baba (who Brown credits with the saying, "Don't worry, be happy), had established an ashram. "Its residents usually explained where it was by saying, `Get on a train in Bombay, and go east for nine hours.' " From the start, Brown was appalled. "I didn't care about Baba....But I knew there was nothing I could do. There was already an envelope in Dad's dresser drawer containing three one-way tickets to India." Over the next five years a deep component of sheer misery would be added to that feeling of shock and helplessness. She opens the book with an account of one of their rare vacations. The ashram "was located in what I had previously thought of as the most desolate place in India. But the expanse of brown-baked weeds about a hundred miles west of Ahmednagar was giving it some serious competition." Stranded, Brown reads a fantasy novel while her parents squabble about whose fault it is there is no train to their mountain hotel. "The novel's heroine, Harry, was a foreign girl who gets kidnapped by desert nomads and learns to ride bareback and do magic. "Certainly I could identify with the `kidnapped and taken to a foreign desert' part, though I wished I were enjoying my experience as much as Harry was enjoying hers. I also wished three of her magnificent desert steeds would appear, so we could ride them up the mountain. "Mom poked me. `Don't just sit there with your nose in a book. Pray with me.' "On second thought, perhaps only one steed." This pretty much sums up the family dynamic. Brown spent as much time as possible buried in a book, while her mother's response to everything was to chant, "Baba, Baba, Baba," and her father kept clear of the fray as much as possible. Even the escape into books was made difficult. The ashram librarian was an unkempt, irascible Indian who took immediate exception to the compound's only child snooping around his tiny, dusty domain and began screaming at her to "Get out!" before they were even introduced. School was even worse. A Catholic school where Brown was the only foreigner, it had English textbooks but classes were taught in Hindi. Brown, who had been an exceptional student, was soon failing. She might have overcome the language barrier if not for the sadism of her teacher, a type (not rare enough) whose professional zeal seems focused on the opportunity to bully those who can't fight back. On her first day Brown took comfort in the thought that "Manija," the hated name that set her apart in America, would not be a problem in India and neither would its diminutive, "Mani," which rhymes with money. But after Mrs. Joshi introduce
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