The Read Around The World Book Club discussion
May 2017 Malaysia
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Chapter 4 - 6
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Melanie
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Apr 26, 2017 08:46AM

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The courtship of Raju and Vasanthi, later only referred to as Appa and Amma (Dad and Mum) is quite the odd affair really. Raju makes the decision of marrying and courting her, because he expects lifelong gratitude for it. He wants to form her in his own image. It's just so wrong. I felt sorry for Vasanthi for her upbringing. Both parents just sound awful. The soul destroying father, the withdrawn mother and her having the responsibility for everything. I like how the author plays with us, drawing Vasanthi as some kind of Cinderella character that needs rescuing by a prince. As we learn in After Great Expectations, chapter 6, this does not really work out in a way. I am amazed how Vasanthi just throws herself into being a rich man's wife and did wonder if Cinderella did the same.
The chapter of the cremation and how the whole family deals with it is something else completely, we get to know them all a bit better and whilst I feel sorry for them, I am very weary to actually allow myself care too much about any of them as I have a feeling we will learn more about them later.
I have to say that I am really enjoying this book.
The chapter of the cremation and how the whole family deals with it is something else completely, we get to know them all a bit better and whilst I feel sorry for them, I am very weary to actually allow myself care too much about any of them as I have a feeling we will learn more about them later.
I have to say that I am really enjoying this book.

They are most fitting - especially The Old Fashioned Courtship in chapter 4. Appa certainly was taking his time courting Amma, and having her two youngest brothers as chaperones! By bringing the food back to the family I thought was as sure sign he was ready to propose so that was still slow and steady.

What a scene when Appa had brought the food for the family and they're all seated and then the mother comes out of her room! And the stench and the starting of the fan and blaming the smell on a neighbor. lol You have to wonder if Appa DID have a sense a smell ... how the story would differ, at all.
I thought Appa was quite loyal to his family - tending to get his sisters married off before he himself entered in a relationship. But his mother, Paati - how awful she was too to Amma and thinking her not worthy of her son.
In chapter 5, I wondered what all Uma was thinking before she was to go away. I thought it funny Paati was a hungry ghost :)

Tanya wrote: "Appa is getting on my nerves in chapter 6 ... how he seems he is showing himself up by marrying Amma and all the seeds he sowed, how he harkens back to those times! It is good that he at least stan..."
That's what I thought, did she really expect to be rescued?
That's what I thought, did she really expect to be rescued?

During this time, Amma seems non-committal - almost numb what she is feeling, if anything, for Appa. I didn't sense a lovey-dovey feeling for Appa - more of an in aweness ... with his fancy car, his nice suit ... this is what an "English lawyer looked like" ... I don't think she put it all together in her head what being married to him would be. More of a trade for houses and what awaited her next door was different and yet the same in a way. I think she wanted to be rescued but maybe didn't really know what that all meant.

The author does a very good job at keeping the reader engaged ... giving us a snippet here and there, in the present or past, and def makes me want more as each chapter moves on.

I still find the characters very two dimensional; for me depth is lacking. Often the characters seem to me to be mouthpieces for types of people rather than individuals.
The style of the continued hints of what actually happened to Paati is a bit too obvious for me. Again it is a personal taste. I do love a good mystery thread but this just doesn't do it for me.
The connection between the character of Raju and the political system is interesting in that I am learning about a part of the world, of which i have next to no knowledge. Again I think the link is a bit clumsy, sometimes feeling a bit forced in order to educate.
But ending on a positive I continue to enjoy Aasha very much indeed. When she is present I see this book world through different eyes, with heart and incredible perception. I also like how this world of ghosts exists whilst the rest of the characters are completely oblivious.


I thought the courtship was really strange. Everything including the proposal was devoid of any feeling.
Ilka wrote: "I like how the book plays with my perception of the characters. In the chapters set in the 1980s I really dislike Amma and she seems to be both condescending and really ignorant. To then see where ..."
Malaysia's history is certainly an interesting one, I found this one interesting http://www.historytoday.com/richard-c...
Malaysia's history is certainly an interesting one, I found this one interesting http://www.historytoday.com/richard-c...
Jayne Catherine pinkett wrote: "oh BTW didn't like the sound of being handed a few leftover bones from the cremation!!!!"
Yeah the bones! Such an odd thing to us...
Yeah the bones! Such an odd thing to us...

My heart goes out to Amma. What a lonely life. Living with a mother in law who doesn't like you maybe worse than a father that is mean to you? Because she is not blood..Idk. Doesn't excuse her for being mean to her Chellam but in a way, she has had to make a new character of herself, The Rich Wife, to protect herself to be able to survive. It is interesting how the pecking order shifts in the family once Uma is born. I did not expect this to be the reason why Uma is close with Paati.
Hopefully I did not screw up any of the characters names lol.


It would have been interesting to know more about Paati's backstory - how did she become so nasty.