34 pages • 1 hour read
Chitra Banerjee DivakaruniA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
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Published in 2010, novelist and poet Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s One Amazing Thing tells the story of nine people from diverse backgrounds who become trapped inside the visa office of the Indian Consulate after a major earthquake hits. As they wait for help to arrive, each person takes a turn telling a story from their own life, often revealing feelings or tales previously unshared. Told in third-person perspective from the point of view of each character, Divakaruni crafts a narrative that provides unique observations from each person while also remarking on the universality of humanity.
Other works by this author include Arranged Marriage, Sister of My Heart, and The Palace of Illusions.
Plot Summary
In an unnamed city on the west coast of the United States, an earthquake strikes. Nine people become trapped in the basement-level visa office of the Indian Consulate. Seven of them are hoping to secure travel visas, while two are employees of the Indian government. These few people represent a variety of nationalities—including African American, Caucasian, Chinese and Indian, along with a variety of beliefs, such as Islam and Hinduism. As a result, prejudice is a major theme in the opening scenes, with several of the characters judging each other based on outward appearances and personal bias.
Cameron, an African American who formerly served in the Army, becomes the unofficial leader of the group. His survival training skills help them stay alive while they wait for help. At first his authority is questioned by Tariq, a young Muslim in the group. Until they calm down and begin to help each other, there are a number of minor skirmishes and instances of people looking out primarily for themselves.
To bring unity to the group and to keep them from harming each other, Uma, a graduate student, suggests that they each take turns telling stories from their own lives. She is inspired by Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales, which she is reading for an English class when the earthquake first strikes. Although there is resistance to this idea at first, eventually everyone agrees to tell a story. They listen attentively during the storytelling. Between stories they share food, take bathroom breaks and assess their situation, which is rapidly deteriorating as the basement begins to flood and the smell of gas becomes stronger. Each person tells a story that reveals something about who he or she is, as well as the reason for needing a travel visa to India.
Their stories reveal the following:
The tales keep the survivors from panicking and being afraid and also help bring them together to reach a common goal. Although they have different backgrounds and personalities, each person has a chance to reveal his/her humanity through the stories, allowing their words to speak more strongly than their actions.
Near the end of the storytelling, a severe aftershock hits, bringing down parts of the building above, damaging their water supply, and causing a gas leak. As Uma tells the final tale, the survivors hear noises from the floors above. It is either the building becoming increasingly unstable as a result of the aftershock, or the noise of a rescue crew approaching. When the final tale ends, the fate of the group is still unknown, but they wait patiently to see what will happen next.
By Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni