Tahmima Anam’s The Bones of Grace is the last in the trilogy that began with A Golden Age and was followed up by The Good Muslim.
Despite the recurrence of characters from the previous novels, The Bones of Grace marks a new beginning, as the narrative takes off from the stories of the 1971 Liberation War and its aftermath, to trace the lives of contemporary Bangladeshis.
The novel weaves many strands of contemporary life, following its protagonist Zubaida Bashir, and through the ramifications of fate and chance, meshing in the story of Anwar, perhaps the male counter to the life/lives that are being recounted.
This multi-layered novel spans continents, as it traces through the journeys of these two characters the many countries and locales where Bangladeshis tread.
Zubaida is a young girl from a privileged background, a graduate student at Harvard University, where she is pursuing a PhD in evolutionary biology. The descriptions of Cambridge and its environs are detailed and evocative of student life in that great university, tracing friendships, chance meetings, academic jealousies and opportunities.
It is in the course of her research that Zubaida has to travel to Pakistan in search of a whale, and the dig brings out the first bones of grace as this prehistoric creature is dug from under the soil.
Our other ancillary protagonist travels to Dubai to work in construction, and the vagaries of migrant workers as the city’s skyscrapers go up gives us the other aspect of transnational Bangladeshi life.
The juxtaposition of the two stories of travel and migration shows the political and economic reality of Bangladesh, and how Bangladeshi lives have not and cannot be lived within the borders that had been fought for so passionately.
The juxtaposition of these two stories has a very happy effect. Zubaida’s story — of the life, loves and adventures of a young woman from a privileged South Asian family — can easily be read and related to the stock-in-trade of South Asian English writing, and could be compared to many novels.