Varsha Seshan's Official Website

  • Home
  • Published Work
    • Books for Ages <5
    • Books for Ages 7-10
    • Books for Ages 10+
    • Reviews
  • Workshops
    • Calendar
    • Book Clubs
    • Creative Writing Programmes
    • School Visits
  • About
    • About Me
    • Recognition
  • Blog
  • Contact

© Copyright 2013 - 2025
Varsha Seshan

 

Asylum

August 11, 2013 by Varsha Seshan Leave a Comment

book coverFor once, the amount of time I’ve taken to read this says nothing about the book.

I remember reading Bloom of Youth. I was faintly unhappy with it. I then somehow ended up reading Grandmother’s Footsteps and was so bored with it that I decided never to read Rachel Anderson again.

Thankfully, despite what the proverb says, I always judge books by their covers. When I picked Asylum, I did not even notice the name of the writer, and the cover was so significantly different from the other two that I’d read, that I realised much later that it was by an author I did not quite like.

I have to change my mind about that.

Asylum was beautiful, moving, haunting.
At a time when I know that getting a UK visa is tough, I wonder disgustedly at why we try so hard to get there.
This book shows me how many people think of it as a wonderland. No, a Wonderland. A book about illegal immigrants, Asylum  touches a part of me that was touched long ago when I read The Hunchback of Notre Dame and discovered that anyone – absolutely anyone – could seek sanctuary in a cathedral. Asylum shows how the UK offered sanctuary, in its own complicated way to people who sought shelter.
It’s an age old tale of human emotion. It’s the well-worn story of courage, bravery and faith. It’s the story of cultures meeting and melting, religions puzzling over one another, and children discovering how beautiful language can be.
It’s a story about how crikey mikey, the life can be as pretty as a picture, as bright as a button.

Filed Under: Books Tagged With: review

« The Pursuit of Happyness
A Tribute: Prem Jeevan »

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.