★ 2022-11-16
A grieving family’s life is altered when they become obsessed with the game of squash.
Gopi is the youngest in a family of three daughters. Her sisters, Mona and Khush, are 15 and 13, respectively, and Gopi is just 11 when the novel opens. The girls’ mother has just died. When a relative tells Gopi’s father that he must find something for his daughters to do to keep them from running wild, Pa decides they should take up squash at Western Lane, the sports center near their home in England. All the girls train diligently, but only Gopi shows true talent. Pa begins to train her harder, finding her an opponent in 13-year-old Ged, the son of a Western Lane employee, and finding himself a friend in Ged’s mother. Gopi pushes herself harder and harder on the squash court, finding release in the repetition of drills and volleys. (“It was with a feeling of having been rescued that I raised my racket and served,” she remembers.) As Gopi disappears into her new identity as an athlete, the rest of her family members are struggling under the weight of their bereavement and the pressure to move forward with their lives under the watchful eyes of their relatives and their community. It is this pressure that threatens to crack the family apart forever. Maroo’s subtle and elegant writing at first seems surprisingly restrained for a novel about a subject as high-spirited and energetic as squash and from a narrator as generally high-spirited and energetic as an 11-year-old girl. But Gopi’s retrospective narration accumulates slow layers of heartbreak as the story proceeds, patiently building up an entire landscape of emotion through gestures, silences, and overheard murmurings in the dark.
A debut novel of immense poise and promise.
"Maroo is deeply in tune with the sensory experiences of being on the court, from the sound of a ball ricocheting off the wall of an adjacent court to the “soft throbbing” through a player’s body when playing and hitting well . . . The lingering power of Maroo’s novel is the way she depicts the possibility that on the court, there is the chance to find some modicum of grace, however temporary.
—Spencer Gaffney, Washington Square Review
"Profoundly resonant . . . A remarkable book in how it deals with that time, drifting forwards, backwards, sometimes superimposing different moments upon each other. To that end, it also contains some of the best sports writing I’ve read since Eimear Ryan’s Holding Her Breath . . . In the act of making books, writers make choices on every line, with every word. This is a debut in which Chetna Maroo gets every choice right."
—Danny Denton, The Irish Times
"There is nothing hurried about squash. Watch Jahangir Khan between shots and it is as if he’s doing nothing. Maroo achieves something of this almost stillness, rhythmic quality and precision in her prose. Western Lane has a dreamy intensity . . . Gopi is steadily finding out what she can make of her feelings, of her life, of the people she meets and the heights she might aspire to."
—Norma Clarke, Times Literary Supplement
“Audacious in its quietness . . . Tune into its wavelength, though, and you hear a symphony of emotion. Through the half-understood exchanges and scenes her narrator recounts, Ms Maroo beautifully conveys the eddies of guilt and recrimination in a bereaved home, and the way feelings can be experienced as physical sensations.”
—The Economist
“This excellent debut lives in the small moments . . . Maroo’s calm, steady prose is so attuned to its subject matter it barely needs lyrical adornment . . . Few novelists write this simply and richly. With this gorgeous debut, Maroo blows most of the competition off the court.”
—Claire Allfree, The Times (UK)
"[Western Lane] feels like the work of a writer who knows what they want to do, and who has the rare ability to do it . . . Maroo has a talent for making the space she needs for emotional complexity by way of physical description."
—Caleb Klaces, The Guardian (UK)
“A rich correspondence between the rituals of grief and competition . . . Melancholy is only one of the moods of this short but brimming book. Squash is also a channel for Gopi’s rage; for connections with other players and her longsuffering father; and for a joyous kind of freedom of expression . . . Maroo’s writing achieves its most graceful rhythms and prescient insights. You’ll want to applaud.”
—Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
"Tight, affecting prose . . . The book slowly unearths its protagonist’s inner world as she swings and swats her way through grief . . . Her passion becomes a salve—even as the rest of her world threatens to fragment."
—James Tarmy, Bloomberg
"Has Maroo . . . written the first great squash novel?"
—Emily Donaldson, The Globe and Mail
“Polished and disciplined . . . The beauty of Maroo’s novel lies in [its] unfolding, the narrative shaped as much by what is on the page as by what’s left unsaid . . . In this graceful novel, the game of squash becomes a way into Gopi’s grief and her attempts to process it.”
—Ivy Pochoda, The New York Times Book Review
“A poignant illustration of the power of sports to help a family deal with grief—and each other—as they gradually make their way out of the darkness . . . [Maroo] is a marvelous and restrained storyteller.”
—Shahina Piyarali, Shelf Awareness
“Maroo’s tale traverses the complexities of one family with an understated beauty, simultaneously graceful and teeming with fierceness, much like Gopi on the court. It is a powerful coming-of-age story, a tale of growing up as much as a tale of grief.”
—Abeje Schnake, Booklist
“Compact and powerful . . . This will invigorate readers.”
—Publisher’s Weekly
“Subtle and elegant . . . Gopi’s retrospective narration accumulates slow layers of heartbreak as the story proceeds, patiently building up an entire landscape of emotion through gestures, silences, and overheard murmurings in the dark. A debut novel of immense poise and promise.”
—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Starting off as an intimate tone poem, this story of a squash-obsessed teenager expands into something with the amplitude, depth, and ringing power of a great symphony. In other words—WOW. Western Lane is glorious. You’ll want to read it over and over again.”
—Aravind Adiga, author of Amnesty
“Combining the precision and the efficiency of an athlete with the mysteries of childhood loss and memory, Western Lane is a novel in which we linger on every breathing line and relish every close observation. What an exceptionally talented writer Chetna Maroo is!”
—Yiyun Li, author of The Book of Goose
"Few novelists write this simply and richly. With this gorgeous debut, Maroo blows most of the competition off the court."
“A rich correspondence between the rituals of grief and competition.”
“A poignant illustration of the power of sports to help a family deal with grief―and each other―as they gradually make their way out of the darkness.”
“Soroya does an excellent job of differentiating Aunt Ranjan, Gopi, and her sisters, as well the male characters, including Gopi’s father, known as Pa, and her uncle. Listeners will connect with this story of loss, cultural struggle, and the many stages of grief…Fans of young adult literature will be drawn to this unique character who is struggling with familiar coming-of-age issues.”
Maya Soroya becomes young Gopi, a girl who loses her mother all too early and gains a passion for sport through her father. This is an exploration of the clash between traditional and contemporary values among the members of a Gujarati community living in England. Soroya does an excellent job of differentiating Aunt Ranjan, Gopi, and her sisters, as well the male characters, including Gopi's father, known as Pa, and her uncle. Listeners will connect with this story of loss, cultural struggle, and the many stages of grief. Soroya pulls us closer to Gopi's truncated world as playing squash comes to replace the gaping losses in her life. Fans of young adult literature will be drawn to this unique character who is struggling with familiar coming-of-age issues. M.R. © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine
Maya Soroya becomes young Gopi, a girl who loses her mother all too early and gains a passion for sport through her father. This is an exploration of the clash between traditional and contemporary values among the members of a Gujarati community living in England. Soroya does an excellent job of differentiating Aunt Ranjan, Gopi, and her sisters, as well the male characters, including Gopi's father, known as Pa, and her uncle. Listeners will connect with this story of loss, cultural struggle, and the many stages of grief. Soroya pulls us closer to Gopi's truncated world as playing squash comes to replace the gaping losses in her life. Fans of young adult literature will be drawn to this unique character who is struggling with familiar coming-of-age issues. M.R. © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine