SONALI DERANIYAGALA teaches in the Department of Economics at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. She is currently a visiting research scholar at the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University, New York, working on issues of economic development, including post-disaster recovery.
One of The New York Times's 10 Best Books of the Year, a Christian
Science Monitor Best Nonfiction Book, a Newsday Top 10 Books pick,
a People magazine Top 10 pick, a Good Reads Best Book of the Year,
and a Kirkus Best Nonfiction Book
“The most powerful and haunting book I have read in years.”
—Michael Ondaatje
“Unforgettable. . . . The most exceptional book about grief I’ve
ever read. . . . [Deraniyagala] has fearlessly delivered on
memoir’s greatest promise: to tell it like it is, no matter the
cost. . . . As unsparing as they come, but also defiantly flooded
with light. . . . Extraordinary.”
—Cheryl Strayed, The New York Times Book Review
“Unforgettable . . . It is a miracle Deraniyagala lived. The fact
that she could write such a memoir, bringing those she loved to
life so completely that they breathe on the page, is itself a
miracle.”
—Vanity Fair
“Out of unimaginable loss comes an unimaginably powerful book. . .
. I urge you to read Wave. You will not be the same person after
you’ve finished.”
—Will Schwalbe
“Vivid. . . . What emerges from this wizardry most clearly is, of
course, Deraniyagala herself—carrying within her present life
another gorgeously remembered one.”
—San Francisco Chronicle
“An amazing, beautiful book.”
—Joan Didion
“Stories of grief, like stories of love, are of permanent literary
interest when done well. . . . Greatness reverberates from
[Deraniyagala’s] simple and supple prose.”
—The New York Times
“Turns revealing into art as powerful as a planetary
vibration.”
—The Plain Dealer
“Both heartbreaking and astonishingly beautiful.”
—New York Post
“[Deraniyagala’s family] spring from these pages with an exuberance
and dimensionality that lifts Wave from memoir into some virtual
realm of documentation.”
—The Boston Globe
“[A] quiet memoir of torturous loss. . . . Deraniyagala tours
memories of her young family’s history with artistry.”
—The New Yorker
“A haunting chronicle of love and horrifying loss. . . . Memory,
sorrow, and undying love.”
—Abraham Verghese
“Radiant. . . . The extremity of Deraniyagala’s story seizes the
attention, but it’s the beauty of how she expresses it that makes
it indelible. . . . [She is] a writer of such extraordinary gifts.
. . . Wave is a small, slender book, but it is enormous on the
inside.”
—Salon
“Chillingly real. . . . Wave captures the elusive, shape-shifting
nature of grief.”
—Newsday
“Beautiful and ravaging . . . faultless prose.”
—Daily Herald
“Immeasurably potent. . . . Relentless in its explication of grief,
this massively courageous, tenaciously unsentimental chronicle of
unthinkable loss and incremental recovery explodes—and then
expands—our notion of what love really means.”
—More magazine
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