Exceptionally High Charged Reading - A must for all romance and freedom lovers.
I HAVE GREAT PLEASURE WRITING THIS REVIEW FOR SHOBHAN BANTWAL. I know Shobhan as family friend before I learnt of her as a writer. Getting to know her through her articles, her mouth-watering recipes, short stories, and now this novel has been an exceptionally delightful process. Though The Dowry Bride is written amidst the backdrop of today's more burning issues, and may well be juxtaposed and come short when compared to issues like the horrors of women raped and killed in African wars, effects of Global Warming due to the indiscriminate plunder of mother earth, and news of many atrocities that are heaped on our collective consciousness by the media, reading this book is time well spent because the answer to every one of our problems is self determination, whether it is set in Palgaum or in Congo, whether it is a nation or a woman under attack. The answer lies in reaching out for help, deciding that you are worth the struggle. Respect, affection, and freedom are worth fighting for. This is the quintessential message that struck me about the Dowry Bride. 'At the age of 21, Megha was not only married for a year, but was about to be executed.¿ The first sentence of this sociological mystery-romance jolts you out of your chair or makes you sit up, no more of that slouching! With a spine erect and your attention riveted you read on ¿ turning pages in quick succession as your appetite for illumination increases. We are taken in flashbacks to her childhood in the mango grove of her father¿s house. Her unadulterated joy in eating a mango is totally endearing. As you follow her from lonely streets, strange backyards, to her highly eligible brother-in-law, Kiran¿s apartment, to a dying relative's bedside, and a creepy cremation place, you begin to relate to the heroine on all levels of your being. This is an affinity that extends far beyond the romance and mystery, it takes you into the very depths of the human soul. I have never felt so at home within the chapters of this book as I did in all my life of reading western fiction. You want Megha to achieve freedom from both mental and social enslavement which is a hard thing for her. Event after event reinforces a sense of hopelessness in the heroine. It becomes personal to you that her struggle to thrive ends in victory. Every page is an eye opener, from superficial to deep insights and it keeps your brain neurons lit up till you have to know what's on the next page. With consummate skill Shobhan develops her characters, introducing elements of a very subtle catharsis in all, from Megha to Mr. Ramnath ' Senior', all of whom she nurtures rather well. Besides being Megha¿s victory you are pulled into other lives as well, and the fabric is woven, piece by colorful piece until you see a quilt - of the victory of human souls that are purged of excessive passions, decadent traditions and immobilizing fears. Megha¿s lover Kiran, her father in law, her father, and the cab driver and indeed everyone who know Megha are affected deeply by her grace, beauty and ¿courage under fire¿. Her mother in law is the most affected, though in a negative way. In stark contrast to Megha own light bearing, Megha's dark and heavy mother-in-law, Chandramma's character is incredibly evil leaving the reader searching for some redemptive quality in her. The satisfaction of knowing her completely comes only in the end - a surprise twist that is chillingly convincing. One part that I particularly enjoyed and related immediately to was when we are taken to Chandramma's usual haunt - the astrologer Haridas- taking up an entire chapter ' Chapter 14'. I am glad this side of our culture is brought to light in such minute detail. We are made to look at the ways the devious greedy mind works. The chapter is full of simple but telling details and achieves an astounding degree of truth telling that strangely frees you- something that no amount of new age wisdom, psycho analysis or pre
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