Return voyage This profound novel-a transcendent gift from the author-follows a young Indian woman's quest in Mexico to learn about her mother
The Guardian Weekly|July 12, 2024
Anita Desai's riddling and haunted new novel is set in motion when Bonita, a young Indian woman, meets a tricksy figure in a park in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico.
Yagnishsing Dawoor
Return voyage This profound novel-a transcendent gift from the author-follows a young Indian woman's quest in Mexico to learn about her mother

A student of Spanish, Bonita is leafing through local newspapers when she is approached. "The Stranger" - elderly, over-friendly and peculiarly dressed "in the flamboyant Mexican style that few Mexican women assume at any other than festive occasions" claims to know Bonita's dead mother, whom she calls "Rosarita". She says they met and became friends when the latter came to pursue art under the tutelage of Mexican maestros. Bonita has no recollections of her mother painting or travelling to Mexico. She remembers, however, "a sketch in wishy-washy pale pastels that had hung on the wall above your bed at home, of a woman seated on a park bench - and yes, it could have been one here in San Miguel - with a child playing in the sand at her feet". The woman "is not looking at the child and the child is not looking at her, as if they had no relation to each other, each absorbed in a separate world, and silent".

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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3 mins  |
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With tyrant Assad ousted, Syrians deserve support and hope
The Guardian Weekly

With tyrant Assad ousted, Syrians deserve support and hope

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4 mins  |
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TV
The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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The Guardian Weekly

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From India to Venezuela and Senegal to the US, more people voted this year than ever before, with over 80 elections across the world. With rising authoritarianism and citizen-led resistance revealing its vulnerabilities and resilience in the face of unprecedented challenges, has democracy reached its breaking or turning point?

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