Lisa

Polychromatic Crime

~ The Colour of Bee Larkham’s Murder, by Sarah J. Harris ~ In 2003, there was Mark Haddon’s The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Nighttime, a ground breaking novel which provided the reader the then rare and charming...

Family Dynamics

~ Cousins, by Salley Vickers ~ There could have been no other possible title as apt for this novel, as Cousins. This is a novel of family love, love between cousins of various generations, love between siblings, parents, aunts, grandmothers, etc....

Dignity and Alienation

~ Convenience Store Woman, by Sayaka Murata ~ Keiko, the protagonist of this 2018 novella, is in what is generally described as a “dead-end” job, working in a convenience store in Japan for the past 18 year, or all her...

Social Realism: Divorce

~ Custody, by Manju Kapur ~ This novel contains Manju Kapur’s most radical protagonist to date. If one regards Kapur’s five novels as a series in her ouevre, Custody challenges Indian tradition and Indian middle class gender roles in a...

Gentle charm with a Sinhalese flavour

~ A Disobedient Girl, by Ru Freeman ~ “She loved fine things and she had no doubt she deserved them.” This is the opening sentence of this debut novel, and one which made me smile. A good, provocative opening sentence...

Love and Deception

~ In the Country of Deceit, by Shashi Deshpande ~ In the Country of Deceit is an entirely and distinctively Deshpande novel; the texture, the characters, all typically and instantly recognisably of Deshpande’s voice and style. For admirers of Deshpande’s...

In and out of Africa

~ Americanah, by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie ~ This extremely accomplished novel is Adichie’s fourth: a marvellous discussion of the identities of middle class Nigerian immigrants to America and UK, as well as migrant returnees to Nigeria. The central protagonists are...

Disconcerting Social Satire

~ How to Get Filthy Rich in Rising Asia, by Mohsin Hamid ~ I am left curiously pleased and yet discontented by Mohsin Hamid’s third novel. Hamid seems to have come to fame as a result of his 2nd novel. The Reluctant Fundamentalist, which...

A beguiling 19th-century botanist

~ The Signature of All Things, by Elizabeth Gilbert ~ Eat Pray Love, and its sequel, Committed, made Elizabeth Gilbert a celebrated author. Those were pleasant enough reads: warm and sincere, if a trifle too gushing; lively and entertaining, if...

Sensitive portrayal of a class divide

~ The Space Between Us, by Thrity Umrigar ~ Umrigar’s love for Bombay, her intimacy with the city, comes through verystrongly in her third novel, as in her earlier two. And once again, Umrigar introduces and familiarises her reader to...

Guilt, duty, ambition, sacrifice

~ Family Life, by Akhil Sharma ~ Unlike Sharma’s first novel, An Obedient Father, which was set in India, Family Life is a story of Indian immigrants to America. The Mishras, a middle-class Delhi family, migrate to New York in...