Product Details
Songs at the River's Edge: Stories from a Bangladeshi Village

Songs at the River's Edge: Stories from a Bangladeshi Village
By Katy Gardner

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Product Description

Part autobiography, part travelogue, part anthropological study, this is an account of a Western woman living in a Muslim Bangladeshi village for 18 months. On an anthropological level, it demonstrates the beginnings of research in someone else's society, on a more general level, it can be read as a novel or a piece of travel writing. The author writes about the friends she made, the characters she met, the rituals she witnessed, about Islam as practised in that village, and about women living in Purdah. She describes trying, as a Western woman, to live the life of the village women.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #192516 in Books
  • Published on: 1997-03-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 160 pages

Customer Reviews

Fascinating insight into rural Asia5
This is the best book I've read this year. I took it out to Bangladesh with me when I went out for two months work in the rural south-east of the country, and spent the whole time immersed in what the people I saw were actually thinking about, what their lives were like, what their problems were...in a way that I couldn't have appreciated without the book. It is a fascinating, penetrating, revealing account of rural life in the country and is a must for any visitor, just as much as the Lonely Planet guide: it tells you about people, real life, real issues. It's difficult to put down and thoroughly engrossing - I can't recommend it enough. It's amazingly accurate, having been to the places Katy Gardner describes, and having met similar people. Classic travel reading.

more than a travel book...5
Katy Gardner spent enough time with a family in Bangladesh to give us an account of life in a village that is fascinating, colourful and empathetic. She wears her anthropological training lightly and conveys the rhythms and reasons of the lives of her hosts so well. Makes tourism seem very thin and pale!