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Press Release 03/10/2021 Anuradha D. Rajurkar's
"American Betiya" is a 21st-century variant of an archetypal tale: the
first-generation American navigating between her parents' old-country
values and the exciting world around her as she figures out who she is.
Stir in hormones and a love both first and forbidden, and that journey
of self-definition becomes an urgent one. The Shorewood writer will launch her debut novel for young adults March 9 with a Zoom event presented by Boswell Books. Rani,
a high-school senior in Evanston, Illinois, dutifully follows the
study-hard, get-into-medical-school trajectory her Indian parents
sanction, until her encounter with Oliver, a tattooed white classmate,
at a gallery opening of her photos. She is modest about her photos,
while he is intense about making art (painting, collage and
installation). Knowing her strict mother would
not approve of her 1) dating, and 2) dating this kind of guy, Rani sees
him on the sly, with the frequent connivance of her best friend Kate, a
white girl Rani's mother likes so much she calls her betiya (daughter). No
spoilers here, but even in a city as woke as Evanston, ethnic and class
differences matter, and become sources of confusion and conflict. The
rough-edged Oliver is from a broken and poorer family. Typical American
teens would agree with Rani that her mom is too strict. But many would
envy how Rani is also connected to the warmth of grandparents and other
relatives, some still in India. A crisis triggers a trip back to Pune,
where Rani makes important discoveries about her own family. Rani is 18. Sex scenes in this novel are gently
written from Rani's point of view — except for Kate's not so gently
stated advice. The bright Rani is both a good
observer and a teen making teen mistakes. Both teen and adult readers
with South Asian roots may feel at home with her story and her
self-analysis: "I have complicated feelings about my Indian clothes: I
love to wear them, but wearing a sari to school feels unsafe, like
exposure — exposure to gawking, othering … " Parents, aunties and grandparents are
differentiated: Even in a traditionalish family, there is more than one
way to be Indian. But "American Betiya" could also appeal to anyone
who's ever had to explain or defend their culture to a friend or
potential love interest. Coincidentally,
readers interested in new South Asian fiction can also turn to a very
different daughter-mother novel, for adults, with scenes in Pune: "Burnt
Sugar," a 2020 Booker Prize finalist by Avni Doshi recently published
in the U.S. Antara, an adult artist, is increasingly responsible for the
care of her difficult mother, Tara, who has dementia — the same mother
who all but abandoned young Antara to join an ashram for several years. You may also access this article through our web-site http://www.lokvani.com/ |
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