This section contains 1,451 words (approx. 4 pages at 400 words per page) |
"The Management of Grief" opens with the chaos at Shaila Bhave's Toronto home. Her house is filled with strangers, gathered together for legal advice, company, and tea. Dr. Sharma, his wife, their children, Kusum and "a lot of women [Shaila] do[esn't] know" are trying to make sense of the crash of Air India Flight 182, simultaneously listening to multiple radios and televisions to catch some news about the event. The Sharma boys murmur rumors that Sikh terrorists had planted a bomb. Shaila narrates the scene from a haze, speaking with detached, shell-shocked calm. The Valium she has been taking contributes to her stable appearance, but inside she feels "tensed" and "ready to scream." Imagined cries from her husband and sons "insulate her" from the anxious activity in her house.
Shaila and Kusum, her neighbor and friend, are sitting on the stairs in Shaila's house. Shaila reminisces...
This section contains 1,451 words (approx. 4 pages at 400 words per page) |