To be quite honest, I struggled with Bright Lines at the outset. It's slow to get started, and while the characters sprang to life, occasionally the dialogue was awkward and wooden. Anwar's dialogue in particular is sprinkled with pedantic tangents that allowed my attention to wander.
That said, Bright Lines really grew on me. Islam has that rare talent that can render New York City into something that seems somehow magical. The Saleems' Brooklyn house with its carefully tended oasis of a garden springs off the page. Maya, Charu, and Ella's adventures to parties and to the beach have the New York City grit stripped away to reveal a new place with undercurrents of possibility.
Islam's characters are undeniably unique and all are fully realized. Anwar, haunted by the war in his home country and the loss of his best friend, has become an herbal pharmacist and a shameless good-natured pothead. Hashi, more educated by far than your average salon worker, uses her understanding of psychology to transform people's outsides to mirror their true selves when she isn't busy coiffing bridesmaids for weddings. Charu is the pampered princess receiving all the benefits her immigrant parents have striven to give her and squandering them on boys and temper tantrums. Ella, uncomfortable in her own skin and plagued by vivid hallucinations since the death of her parents, is still struggling to find her own identity.
Islam renders Bangladesh with the same artful hand she uses to bring NYC to life, contrasting beautiful beaches with wretched slums. She sets present day Bangladesh in stark contrast to the war torn state of Anwar and Hashi's youth. In a country that endured a painful transformation, Islam expertly guides the Saleem family through a terrible transformation of their own until the scars and the rebirth of both are gently intertwined.
Bright Lines, while not perfect, is an extremely promising debut for Tanwi Nandini Islam. I'll be looking forward to the next novel from this author who easily draws the magical out of the ordinary.
(Thanks to the publisher for providing me with a copy in exchange for review consideration.)
