Bitter sweets by Roopa FarookiThis is a featured page

Bitter sweets
In 1950s Bengal, Henna Rub, a precocious, wayward teenager, brings off a brilliant marriage to a wealthy romantic, Ricky Karim, trapping him with a web of lies that she has spun with her wheeler-dealer father.

And so on his wedding night, believing himself married to an educated, sonnet-reading, tennis-playing soul mate, Ricky is horrified to discover that his new bride is in fact a lazy, illiterate, shopkeeper's daughter.

As Ricky and Henna resign themselves to a loveless marriage of convenience, the way is paved for a future of double-lives and complicit deception - an unspoken family tradition that is inherited by their daughter Shona.


But decades later, living among the subcontinental sweet shops of South London, it is Shona who is forced to discover unpalatable truths about her loved ones and come to terms with the lies which superficially hold her family together . . . and which are really keeping them apart.

If you would like to review this book please leave a comment below.


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coshamreadinggroup not bad but.... 0 Oct 15 2007, 6:37 AM EDT by coshamreadinggroup
Thread started: Oct 15 2007, 6:37 AM EDT  Watch
The group had no strong feelings either way about this book, which is normally a bad sign. A bit of light reading that fails to challenge.
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Anonymous Bitter Sweets by Roopa Farooki 0 Sep 13 2007, 10:58 AM EDT by Anonymous
 
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A lightish novel-rather predictable, but I enjoyed it... just the book to take on holiday with you. it's her first novel and there's no reason why a book shouldn't have the i's adotted and the t's crossed. She draws her characters well and if , in a few places, the text becomes rather 'treacly', there are more very well observed passages of social situatins which shows a good understanding of all aspects of family life.
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