The Gossamer Glow of Jhumpa Lahiri’s “Roman Stories” | The Slowdown - Culture, Nature, Future
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Cover of “Roman Stories” by Jhumpa Lahiri. (Courtesy Knopf)
Cover of “Roman Stories” by Jhumpa Lahiri. (Courtesy Knopf)

Just over a decade ago, in 2012, Jhumpa Lahiri moved with her husband and two children to Rome. In the 12 years prior, she had become a literary sensation, gaining wide recognition for her fictional works exploring themes of home, family, tradition, estrangement, exile, in-betweenness, and belonging. In 2000, Lahiri received the Pulitzer Prize for her debut story collection, Interpreter of Maladies; her best-selling 2003 novel, The Namesake, was turned into a Hollywood film directed by Mira Nair. Her arrival in Rome, it turned out, would alter her already extraordinary literary trajectory—and her relationship to language—forever, giving her what she has called “a second life, an extra life.” Her 2013 novel, The Lowland, which was a finalist for both the Man Booker Prize and a National Book Award, remains her last published work of fiction written in English. In Rome, Lahiri’s “linguistic landscape dramatically transformed,” as she has put it, and by 2015, at age 48, she began writing almost exclusively in Italian.

“Writing in another language reactivates the grief of being between two worlds, of being on the outside. Of feeling alone and excluded,” Lahiri (who was the guest on Ep. 69 of our Time Sensitive podcast) notes in her 2022 collection of essays, Translating Myself and Others. This sentiment gets to the heart of her latest story collection, Roman Stories (Knopf), which has been beautifully translated to English by Lahiri (who has also become a noted translator in recent years) and Todd Portnowitz.

Jhumpa Lahiri. (Photo: Laura Sciacovelli)
Jhumpa Lahiri. (Photo: Laura Sciacovelli)

In these nine probing stories, there are traces of where Lahiri began with Interpreter of Maladies—with tales of outsiders and outcasts, immigrants and “foreigners”—but in that first book, each of the characters has some connection, however tenuous, to India. With Roman Stories, Lahiri enters a broader diasporic world, this time entirely within the city in which she has lived, on and off, for the past 11 years. It is a magnificent book reflective of—and extending out of—the time Lahiri has spent in the Eternal City, but with giant fictional leaps. Through characters who experience at turns, among other things, xenophobia and nationalism, violence, racism, anxiety, and various social and cultural divisions, Lahiri explores what it means to adapt to Rome, to adopt it as a home, to decipher its particularities and peculiarities as an outsider—and also, in some cases, to experience it as an insider.

If it’s not already clear, Lahiri is obsessed with the city. In a 2017 interview with LitHub, she said, “The first time I saw Rome, after a couple of hours I said to my husband: I absolutely have to live in this city. Why, I didn’t care; I was overcome by a feeling, an urge to be in a place and have a relationship with that place.” That urge shines bright throughout these immersive, inquisitive, and sensuous stories.

Finely tuned, Roman Stories showcases Lahiri’s profound skill at writing in her third—and now, in a way, her first—language, and in the case of this new English-language edition, at translation. In her hands, the city of Rome (and in the stories “The Boundary” and “P’s Party,” also the countryside outside it) is expressed with tender intimacy and care. Her prose shimmers, as exquisite and ethereal as the cinematography of a Paolo Sorrentino film. Layered with flashes of sun-drenched beauty (“the huge, glowing clouds, the color of pomegranates in October”), her prose is filled with a certain loneliness and melancholy, too, as well as a sense of decay and fracture. Consider, for example, the foreign-born visiting professor in “The Reentry,” who, out to lunch at a trattoria with her Roman-born friend who’s in mourning, “fears that her relationship with the city is actually quite tenuous. In the end, she has no personal link to the history she studies, nor will she ever experience the comfort of having lunch in a trusted restaurant that forms part of her family’s history, that holds within it memories of countless lunches between father and daughter, a space that soothes her friend even after such an immense loss.”

It should be noted that Lahiri was also recently the editor of The Penguin Book of Italian Short Stories (2019). Nearly half of the stories in that compendium were published in English for the first time and, in those acts of translation, Lahiri captured a certain Italianness that can’t be understood in any other way than through fiction and translation. And just as those stories—whether Goffrido Parese’s “Melancholy,” Alba de Céspedes’s “Invitation to Dinner,” or Alberto Moravia’s “The Other Side of the Moon”—put readers in distinctly Italian frames of mind, Lahiri’s in Roman Stories do the same, but through Rome specifically.

As much Romanness as there is to these new stories, though, there’s also a heartbreaking otherness. In various ways, “us”-and-“them” divides recur throughout. An overwhelming sense of despair—a limbo between being “home” yet also yearning to escape some of the realities that come with it—pervades. In “The Boundary,” a 15-year-old immigrant housekeeper in the Roman countryside recalls that her father, when living in Rome earlier in his life, was badly beaten by a group of men who told him, “Go back to wherever you came from.” In “A Well-Lit House,” a group of women block an immigrant wife and mother from entering her family’s apartment building and shout at her: “Pack your bags.” In “The Delivery,” a dark-skinned woman is strolling along a street when a motorino pulls up behind her; next thing she knows, a voice calls out, “Go wash those dirty legs.”

In the collection’s final story, “Dante Alighieri,” split up into nine sections, the narrator rather prophetically notes at one point, “You travel a certain distance, you desire and make decisions, and you’re left with recollections, some shimmering and some disturbing, that you’d rather not conjure up,” a single sentence that practically captures the book’s very essence. In these transfixing tales, Lahiri presents a polyphonic Rome of varied views. It is a book about the city’s frustrating and fragile realities. It is a book about having an acute, timeworn understanding of what it means to be considered “alien” or “other.” It is a book about living between worlds. It is a book that evokes the gossamer glow of Italy’s magical and confounding capital city.

That this is by the same author who, 24 years ago, published Interpreter of Maladies is astounding, but not surprising. The jump between the two books isn’t just massive—it’s metamorphic. Still, her linguistic DNA is present. In time, Roman Stories may prove to be Lahiri’s most seminal work of fiction yet.

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Detroit is a city of craft. Of carmakers and Carhartt. Of Motown Records and Eminem. Of iconic midcentury design (Isamu Noguchi’s Hart Plaza and Dodge Fountain, buildings by Mies van der Rohe and Minoru Heidelberg Project. So it’s fitting that, following previous iterations in Copenhagen, last fall, and in Turin, Italy, last month, the Freits latest “Hermès in the Making” exhibition (through June 15). A playful, Willy Wonka factory–like presentation of the company’s know-how, the display offers “an o not to smile while walking through it. Divided into four sections—”A Culture of Traditional Craftsmanship,” “High-Quality Msecret!” Beyond, stations feature artisans in saddle-stitching, porcelain painting, gemstone setting, glove-making, leather wor

Photo: Carlo Banfi. (Courtesy Flos)

Emerging from the pandemic, the design industry, like most of us, has changed. The past two and a half years, which havean increasingly pressing climate crisis, have formed a solemn backdrop. In March 2020, almost at once, in the locked-down lives of many, the notion of “home” a

Maria Cristina Didero. (Photo: Stefan Giftthaler)

The concept of the Golden Age was first introduced by the ancient Greek philosopher Hesiod, around 700 B.C., in a refereDesign Miami Basel (June 14–19), taking place at the Swiss city’s Messeplatz. Organized around the theme “The Golden Age: Rooted in the Pa

Cover of “The Trayvon Generation” by Elizabeth Alexander

How do the generation of Black Americans who grew up in the past 25 years reckon with the tragedies that play out in theThe Trayvon Generation (Grand Central Publishing), poet, educator, and scholar Elizabeth Alexander—who currently serves as the president of the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, the largest humanities philanthropy in the UnEp. 52 of our Time Sensitive podcast)—explores these questions, and others, by meditating on race, class, trauma, justice, and memory, and their influences

Installation view of “Plastic: Remaking Our World.” (Photo: Bettina Matthiessen)

In the early 1860s, an advertisement in The New York Times offered $10,000 to anyone who could invent a new material for billiard balls. At the time, elephant ivory was the matercamphor, a waxy substance found in the wood of the camphor laurel tree. Though celluloid would later prove to be less than idea

Rendering of Drift’s indoor drone performance, “Social Sacrifice” (2022). (Courtesy Drift and Aorist)

Non-fungible tokens, or NFTs (one-of-a-kind digital assets created using blockchain technology), have divided the art woEp. 59 of our Time Sensitive podcast), see them as pathways to a promising future, while others express concern around the sky-high price points and carbon emissions they generate.

“Between the Mountain and the Sky” by Maggie Doyne

At 35, Maggie Doyne is the mother of more than 50 children. One is her biological child, who lives with Doyne, her husbaBetween the Mountain and the Sky: A Mother’s Story of Hope and Love (Harper Horizon), out last month. Through telling her extraordinary story, she demonstrates the life-altering power of

A ramen bowl by Taku Satoh. (Photo: Hiroshi Tsujitani. Courtesy Nacasa & Partners Inc.)

Eating ramen is a multisensory experience: the fragrant steam coming off of the broth, the slurping sound of enjoying thThe Art of the Ramen Bowl” (March 18–July 5) that’s on view at the Los Angeles location of Japan House, an initiative with additional hubs in Londonburi, the porcelain receptacles in which ramen is traditionally served, and renge, the compact, teardrop-shaped spoons that often accompany them, made by 30 leading artists, architects, and designers.

Anicka Yi’s “Biologizing the Machine (spillover zoonotica)” (2022), on view at Milan’s Pirelli HangarBicocca. (Photo: Agostino Osio. Courtesy the artist and Pirelli HangarBicocca.)

Anicka Yi’s intoxicatingly sensory installations don’t just surround the viewer—many of them literally permeate the body, their sEp. 14 of our At a Distance podcast), in which three industrial steel tanks saturate the air with an aroma concocted by fusing secretions from carpenter an

Integrative nutritionist Daphne Javitch

Integrative nutritionist Daphne Javitch helps people develop their versions of a healthy life—a potentially daunting tasDoing Well, Javitch, a former womenswear consultant at Theory and Uniqlo, offers private health and career coaching as well as groEp. 46 of our At a Distance podcast.)

Installation view of “David Byrne: How I Learned About Non-Rational Logic.” (Courtesy Pace Gallery)

Thick, wobbly lines branch out across a wall of Pace Gallery’s global headquarters in New York. Follow each stroke to itwomen, grandpas, and singers craning toward the ceiling, and donuts, hairs, and holes reaching into the ground. Part absurdist diagram, part heart-melting poem, and part consciousness-shifting artwork, thiDavid Byrne: How I Learned About Non-Rational Logic” (on view Feb. 2–March 19), a restorative survey of drawings the musician has made over the past two decades.

Skyscraper Page website

With their audacious, gravity-defying forms, skyscrapers have captured the public’s imagination for more than a century.Skyscraper Page, a zany website with a skyscraper discussion forum that has spread to some 100,000 threads. But what’s the point of obs