In 1988, with her collection The Middleman and Other Stories, Bharati
Mukherjee became the first naturalized American citizen to win the
National Book Critics Circle Award.
Now reissued with an introduction by Pushcart Prize winner Madhuri
Vijay, these characters and their stories shed new light on an America
increasingly defined by movement, transience, fragmentation, and
reinvention. As Vijay writes in her introduction, these characters are
"constantly on the move, constantly in flux, shifting between lovers,
jobs, nations, apartments, or all four at the same time." An
aristocratic Filipina negotiates a new life for herself with an Atlanta
investment banker. An Italian woman from New Jersey has an uncomfortable
Thanksgiving when she brings her new Afghani boyfriend home to meet the
family. And in the title story, an Iraqi Jew whose travels have ended in
Queens suddenly finds himself an unwitting guerrilla in a South American
jungle. Passionate, comic, violent, and tender, these stories draw us
into the center of a cultural fusion, moments glowing with the energy
and exuberance of a society remaking itself.