How does a 40+ young man bring up his dad? What happens when a strictly vegetarian Tam-Brahm marries a strictly non-vegetarian Bengali? Can the years vanish when Ruhani returns to the same place to relive a moment frozen decades ago? The short stories here are not about some other world and other people. It is about you and me. Who knows, you may find yourself in the book!
How does a 40+ young man bring up his dad? What happens when a strictly vegetarian Tam-Brahm marries a strictly non-vegetarian Bengali? Can the years vanish when Ruhani returns to the same place to relive a moment frozen decades ago? The short stories here are not about some other world and other people. It is about you and me. Who knows, you may find yourself in the book!
One of the best books for 2023' Cosmopolitan Against a rising tide of fundamentalism in India, a mother and daughter lose the most important man in their lives. Shashi, fifty-something and suddenly widowed, tries to contact her only daughter, Tara, to break the news, but cannot reach her. As Shashi confronts her loss, she finds, amidst grief, unexpected new freedoms. Meanwhile, Tara, a spoiled but brilliant university student, has retreated to Dharamsala to deal with the fall out from an ill-advised relationship. Her self-imposed solitude makes contact near impossible, so by the time she learns of her loss, the funeral is already over. Without the man that bound them, Shashi and Tara struggle to reconcile. But his absence also makes them a target for an emerging religious group determined to put women in their place, and Shashi and Tara individually prepare to defend their independence. If mother and daughter are to come together, they must find a way to understand both their new world, and each other. But can you ever emerge from an eclipse unscathed? 'Lyrical throughout yet so deceptively easygoing... an extraordinary novel' André Aciman 'Powerful, evocative and accomplished – it's hard to believe The Illuminated is a debut' Alice Ryan 'Gives voice to a new generation' BBC Radio 4
This book re-examines 'everyday resistance', gender and power through the lens of women's experiences in colonial South Asia. Moving away from educated and outstanding figures and drawing on a range of unconventional sources, it unearths a narrative of deep and enduring resistance offered by less extraordinary women in their daily lives.
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