Synopsis
hardback/signed by author with author bookmark
Reviews
This impressive first novel chronicling a woman's coming-of-age combines delicately tangible detail--the hues, tones and flavors of India--with a well-crafted knot of relationships from which narrator Megan Manning grasps the threads of her own future. Megan's childhood in Madras, toward the end of British rule, is stamped by her family's tragic reaction to a forbidden marriage between Megan's Aunt Letty and an Indian medical student. A decade later, a crisis prompts Megan's rigid mother to send the shy 17-year-old to Letty's home in the north of India for an extended stay. In Nerbudapur, Megan finds herself surrounded by a confusing array of older women who usher in her womanhood: The once courageous and now alcoholic Letty, a physician who abandoned medicine until circumstance restores her confidence; Nila, a beautiful exhibitionist and mistress of Megan's uncle, who instructs Megan in the art of the sari and demonstrates a woman's power over men. When Megan is inevitably drawn to an Indian student activist in the heated political climate after Gandhi's assassination, she reactivates her family's darkest myths with consequent hard choices that result in a practical kind of redemption. Smith's clear, direct prose style makes this a satisfying read.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
India in 1947 is a country on the threshold of self-government; and Megan Manning, the novel's central character, is on the threshold of womanhood. When her father, a British railroad official, is sent away for leprosy treatment, Megan leaves Madras to live with a reclusive aunt who has created a family rift by marrying an Indian. While in Nerbudapur, Megan meets people who are of both the old and the new India. Her uncle's family follows strict caste customs and frowns as much on his marriage as do his English wife's family. Megan perpetuates the blurring of lines by falling in love with a young Indian from a nontraditional family. This sensitive novel of family conflicts, personal growth, and young love is set against a background of an India of romance and promise. For all fiction collections.
- Joan Hinkemeyer, Englewood P.L., Col.
Copyright 1989 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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