South Asian

Pilgrimage and Patriarchy

~ The Unlikely Adventures of the Shergill Sisters, by Balli Kaur Jaswal ~ Can a pilgrimage to honour their mother’s dying wishes bring three bickering sisters together? And can they also examine the ghosts of their past and face the...

Zen and the Art of Curmudgeonly Redemption

~ Professor Chandra Follows his Bliss, by Rajeev Balasubramanyam ~ Professor Chopra is the quintessential cantankerous, opinionated, elderly Indian man. He is also a very distinguished Cambridge academician in the field of economics. How distinguished exactly? The novel opens on...

No Place Like

~ A House for Mr Misra, by Jaishree Misra ~ Buying or building a house is a fraught exercise for any couple. Peculiar aesthetic preferences are discovered, behaviour under stress is tested, disagreements about location, style and price develop, and...

The Post Office

For decades our local Bangalore post office remained unchanged, growing more and more decrepit. By 2017 the whitewash had long since faded, there were holes in the roof, and the lighting inside was provided by a few faint bulbs. Most...

Pondicherry Bikers

Pondi is full of women on scooters and cycles. In other Indian cities too there are plenty of women drivers, but in Pondi it seemed like a quarter to a third of the two-wheelers were driven by women. There are...

Anglo-Indians and ‘Home’

~ Mulligatawny Soup, by Manorama Mathai ~ A young woman decides to discover more about the Indian father who abandoned her English mother to return to Calcutta. Superficially this might sound like a teenage finding-onself tale, but this is really...

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...

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...