The stories in Love Songs for a Lost Continent are wild, rich, and unexpected. Anita Felicelli writes with marvelous dark humor and nuance about families, countries, castes, multiple identities, romantic relationships, complicities. A Brahmin girl married to an abusive Bengal tiger becomes a suspect in his death; the son of Tamil ex-pats returns to Chennai to study folklore and falls disastrously in love; a young woman betrays a friend to try to keep her from marrying the wrong man; a recent college graduate devoted to order begins an affair with someone who introduces her to the charms of conning strangers. Although Felicelli’s voice and way of seeing the world are unique, her ability to take a story on startling turns, to bring together emotional resonances and the fantastic, makes me think of Helen Oyeyemi. But, at the same time, there are no real comparisons. This book is truly original.
I'm struck by how wonderfully believable and complicated the characters are, the pleasures of watching complicity and betrayal, love and discovery. As some of the characters appear in multiple stories, we see them from new angles, so that reading the whole book means all kinds of small and large discoveries and reversals. The subtleties of who has power and how they use it – all the different ways that caste and class and hierarchies of all kinds play out.
The stories slide back and forth from magic realism to the bite of reality and then to myths or fairytales transfigured into something very like real life. And they’re full of great places and details: a labyrinth of oily dark kelp, air that smells like plastic burning when the neighbors are smoking crack, a mother’s inability to explain to her child why we can’t hit the people we don’t like, a vividly awful lie detector, forests and cities, vanilla fields and stone towers. Whether they’re in a village in India, on vacation in Andalusia, or just trying to survive in New York or the San Francisco Bay Area, trouble finds these characters, but they can’t stop each other and can’t be stopped, no matter how fierce the forces against them. This book knocks me out. For a long time to come I'll be returning to its characters, images, and insights, getting to know it more deeply.