Anil's ghost /

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by Ondaatje, Michael,
[ 02. English Fiction ] Published by : Vintage Canada, (Toronto :) Physical details: 311 p. ; 21 cm. Subject(s): Women forensic anthropologists --Fiction. | Dead --Identification --Fiction. | Sri Lanka --Fiction. | Detective and mystery stories. --gsafd. | Psychological fiction. --lcsh. Year : 2000 02. English Fiction Item type : 02. English Fiction
Location Call Number Status Date Due
Westisle Composite High School F OND Available

Winner of the Kiriyama Pacific Rim Book Prize for Fiction for 2000.

Includes bibliographical references (p. [310]-311).

Anil Tessira, a 33-year-old native Sri Lankan who left her country 15 years before, is a forensic pathologist sent by the U.N. human rights commission to investigate reports of mass murders on the island. Atrocities are being committed by three groups: the government, anti-government insurgents, and separatist guerrillas. Working secretly, these warring forces are decimating a population paralyzed by pervasive fear. Taciturn archeologist Sarath Diyasena is assigned by the government to be Anil's partner; at 49, he is emotionally withdrawn from the chaotic contemporary world, reserving his passion for the prehistoric shards of his profession. Together, Anil and Sarath discover that a skeleton interred among ancient bones in a government-protected sanctuary is that of a recently killed young man. Anil defiantly sets out to document this murder by identifying the victim and then making an official report. Throughout their combined forensic and archeological investigation, detailed by Ondaatje with the meticulous accuracy readers will remember from descriptions of the bomb sapper's procedures in The English Patient, Sarath remains a mysterious figure to Anil. Her confusion about his motives is reinforced when she meets his brother, Gamini, an emergency room doctor who is as intimately involved in his country's turmoil as Sarath refuses to be. The lives of these characters, and of others in their orbits, emerge circuitously, layer by layer. In the end, Anil's moral indignation--and her innocence--place her in exquisite danger, and Sarath is moved to a life-defining sacrifice.

Kiriyama Pacific Rim Book Prize for Fiction, 2000.