The "This Book Is Awesome. READ IT! READ IT NOW!" thread
Posted: Fri Feb 25, 2011 5:47 am
Okay.
Secret Daughter
by Shilpi Somaya Gowda.

Takes place in the 1980s, 90s, and now. Two main perspectives: one couple in California, another in India. Almost all the characters get at least one chapter of their own pov, though it's all in 3rd person present tense, with some flashbacks thrown in.
The California couple are both doctors and are infertile. The woman is a caucasian pediatrician, and the husband immigrated from India when he was 20 (from a relatively well-to-do family) and is now a surgeon.
The Indian couple, well, they are poor villagers, and when their 1st baby is a girl, the drunk and sorely disappointed husband comes in right after the birth and removes it from the birthing hut and "disposes" of it, as the poorer men tend to do sometimes when they think they need a son to help in the fields and they doubt they'll be able to afford a daughter's dowry to marry her off. The mother is crushed of course. Has a 2nd baby. This one a girl too. Husband is furious, but she secretly gets it to an orphanage to prevent it going the same way as the 1st and she goes back home to the village and says it has died. The 3rd baby is a son, and is kept and much rejoiced in by all the family, and though the mother loves the son, she is unable forget her unwanted daughters, or stop resenting her husband and his family for the fact that they think it was just a common sense thing to do, getting rid of them.
The American couple end up adopting the girl baby from the Indian orphanage and raising her in California.
So the story follows the 2 families the next 20 years or so, and the visions of the usa and rich india and poor/slum india and the good and bad of all 3 cultures (cause all 3 are just so different) are just so strikingly portrayed. It really captures how muddled the world is, with no clear black and white in any of it when it comes to ethics or family or lifestyle, etc etc etc.
Only 342 pages (imo, should have been longer to flesh out the characters more) but otherwise just brilliant.
READ IT! READ IT NOW!
Secret Daughter
by Shilpi Somaya Gowda.

Takes place in the 1980s, 90s, and now. Two main perspectives: one couple in California, another in India. Almost all the characters get at least one chapter of their own pov, though it's all in 3rd person present tense, with some flashbacks thrown in.
The California couple are both doctors and are infertile. The woman is a caucasian pediatrician, and the husband immigrated from India when he was 20 (from a relatively well-to-do family) and is now a surgeon.
The Indian couple, well, they are poor villagers, and when their 1st baby is a girl, the drunk and sorely disappointed husband comes in right after the birth and removes it from the birthing hut and "disposes" of it, as the poorer men tend to do sometimes when they think they need a son to help in the fields and they doubt they'll be able to afford a daughter's dowry to marry her off. The mother is crushed of course. Has a 2nd baby. This one a girl too. Husband is furious, but she secretly gets it to an orphanage to prevent it going the same way as the 1st and she goes back home to the village and says it has died. The 3rd baby is a son, and is kept and much rejoiced in by all the family, and though the mother loves the son, she is unable forget her unwanted daughters, or stop resenting her husband and his family for the fact that they think it was just a common sense thing to do, getting rid of them.
The American couple end up adopting the girl baby from the Indian orphanage and raising her in California.
So the story follows the 2 families the next 20 years or so, and the visions of the usa and rich india and poor/slum india and the good and bad of all 3 cultures (cause all 3 are just so different) are just so strikingly portrayed. It really captures how muddled the world is, with no clear black and white in any of it when it comes to ethics or family or lifestyle, etc etc etc.
Only 342 pages (imo, should have been longer to flesh out the characters more) but otherwise just brilliant.
READ IT! READ IT NOW!