What a tangled web some families weave. A Mother’s Secret by Renita D’Silva is a fragrant tale of mothers and daughters stretching from England to India. Gaddehalli is a tiny village in Goa but I could smell the spices, hear the wind in the trees, and see the buffalos in the fields as if I was there.
This novel about identity starts with a young girl, Durga, who must stay with her grandmother in Gaddehalli after an accident to her parents. The ruined mansion where she lives, which is avoided by the locals as haunted and full of bad luck, is the centre of this story. The modern-day strand follows Jaya, a young mother in England mourning the loss of her baby son and whose mother Sudha has recently died. Sudha was an emotionally-withdrawn mother, but when Jaya discovers some of her mother’s hidden possessions, including diaries, she pieces together the story of Sudha’s early life. Jaya is looking for the identity of her own father; she finds so much more.
From the beginning, it is a guessing game: how is the story of Durga connected to Kali, Jaya and Sudha? Halfway through, all my ideas of the twist had been proven wrong and I was wondering if the storylines would come together. At times I got the girls confused, but I read the second half of the novel quicker than the first and the twist, when it came, was a big surprise. A clever novel about families and how the important, simple things in life can sometimes be forgotten because of pride, selfishness or shame.
Read more about Renita D’Silva’s books here.
If you like ‘A Mother’s Secret’, try these other novels set in India:-
‘The God of Small Things’ by Arundhati Roy
‘Midnight’s Children’ by Salman Rushie
‘Life of Pi’ by Yann Martel
‘A Mother’s Secret’ by Renita D’Silva [UK: Bookouture] Buy at Amazon
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The scents of India: A MOTHER’S SECRET by @RenitaDSilva #bookreview http://wp.me/p5gEM4-2b0 via @SandraDanby