A couple of months back, I was contacted by one gentleman from Leadstart Publishing Pvt. Ltd. I was elated when he wrote that they would like to send me their books to be reviewed. A few days back, I was on cloud nine to receive four titles from them at my doorstep. The titles are:
- Marry Go Round by Sadiqa Peerbhoy
- Arjuna by Anuja Chandramouli
- A Salesman's Lessons by C R Jena
- Horseshoe Garage by Hitesha Despande
I decided to start with Marry Go Round. And here's my review.
Name: Marry Go Round
Author: Sadiqa Peerbhoy
No. of pages: 223
Genre: Humour
Publisher: Juffic Books (An imprint of Leadstart Publishing Pvt. Ltd.)
Price: INR 145/-
Published in: 2013
The blurb of the book says: A determined mother
using blatant emotional blackmail to inveigle her NRI son into a
marriage with the right sort of desi girl; a reluctant groom with a
live-in girlfriend following him all the way to India; a bride on the
rebound from a disastrous liaison with a married man; skeletons rattling
in old family cupboards; an aunt on the vengeance trail ? and we have a
heady cocktail of an arranged wedding that morphs into a love marriage
with quite the wrongest possible girl?with a little tactical help from
long-dead ancestors. Written in a refreshingly original style, Marry Go
Round is one quaint combine of today?s merrily irreverent humour and a
staid Hyderabadi milieu with its Nawabi hangover from grandiose times
long past.
About the author: Sadiqa Peerbhoy is a literature graduate from Elphinstone College, Mumbai, Sadiqa Peerbhoy
did an MA in Journalism and a post graduate course in Creative Writing
from The New School, New York. She has been an advertising professional
all her working life and the creative force behind many a brand launch
and its continuing success. Sadiqa started freelancing to maintain her
sanity in a high-stress job and has since written and published several
hundred short stories in leading magazines and Sunday papers. She has
been a columnist for Deccan Herald, Newstime, Midday, The Brief, and the
Times of India, Bangalore. Her long-running, topical humour column,
Swalpa Connect Maadi in Deccan Herald has a devoted following in
Bangalore. She has scripted two popular serials for national television:
Honee Anhonee and Sara Jahan Hamara. She has also written documentary
scripts for BBC World. Two of her short story collections have been
published. Her third book, ‘But Other Mothers Do’, is a hilarious take
on the trials and tribulations of a young working mother. Adding further
to her eminent record of versatility, Sadiqa has set up and run a
British affiliated college in India for specialised studies in
advertising, marketing and graphic design: The Wigan & Leigh College
in Bangalore. Her academic pursuits also include a visiting
lecturership on Creativity and Advertising at IIM Bangalore, Chitra Kala
Parishat and several other colleges. Moreover, as Managing Director of
Innergy Skills, a training and placement company, Sadiqa conducts
Creativity Workshops for Corporates like HP, ABB among others. She is
the mother of two children and a passionate student of Hindustani music.
This is her first foray into full length fiction.
STORYLINE:
The story is predominantly about Sartaj Begum, who
is a typical Indian soap mother whose sole purpose in life is to get her child
married and reproduce. It's a laugh riot how she tricks her NRI son to
come home from NY to get him married. He comes down for three weeks and he is
to go back with his bride in tow. The plot is based in Hyderabad and the
characters are interesting and hilarious with their Hyderabadi nuances.
CENTRAL CHARACTERS:
Sartaj Jehan Begum: She's cent percent drama and
hence spells entertainment. She still lives in the hangover of the grandeur of
old jagir days. To her Shakespeare is the demented Sheikh Peer
and democratic is damocratiking. When she has her mind up to something,
nobody can stop her.
Professor Shujat Ali: The husband of Sartaj.He is a
retired English professor who never fails to quote Shakespeare, whether it
suits the situation or not. Food is the love of his life (other than
Shakespeare) and his wife believes there is a shaitaan resident in his
stomach. And he does not dare to go against his wife.
Riaz: The NRI son and only child of Sartaj. A typical
son who came to visit his parents only once in eight years. He is the stud in
Manhattan where ladies throw themselves at him. He has a drummer in him who
starts drumming in all situations. Strangely he falls in and out of love pretty
fast. Of course the degrees of his love are different for different women.
Dilawar: The cousin and friend of Riaz and also his partner
in crime. However, he is easily bribed by Sartaj with her delicious halwa
to help in tricking Riaz to come home.
Sana: The first prospective bride for Riaz who has her
own story. She is a headstrong, liberal minded and confident woman.
Dr. Meera: The final bride. Turns out to be Riaz's dreamgirl.
WHAT I FEEL:
I liked the writing style. It was witty to the
bone. Here a few lines:
- "To take a broom to its
walls and ceilings would be to destroy the ancestral homes of a million
spiders and render hundreds of the darting lizards homeless
refugees."
- "May God wreak his
devastation on jobs which separate mothers from their children.."
- "...in the tone she
might have used to address a mentally challenged cockroach who had
mistaken the dish-wash bar for ice-cream."
- "....which side his parantha
is ghee'd on."
The book is fully of humorous similes. Here
are a couple of them:
- "The continuing
litany.....was bruising...like a coconut scrapper...."
- ".....with her bottoms
like two large restless cats in a tight bag."
- ".....hissed like a
aerosol deo spray "
- "...juddered like an
old car in the wrong gear.
The story goes on fine, making you laugh even in sad situations. The
crazy relatives, the greedy matchmaker, the families showing off, scandals...everyone and everything has
a good comic timing. But the story takes an unexpected twist on the 176th
page when the final bride makes her entry. I felt this twist was unnecessary.
Sana and Meera could have been the same girl. Riaz could have pursued Sana and
she could have been his dream girl with the beautiful green eyes. Strangely his description of his dream girl comes at the end and after he sees Meera. Also the ending with the deceased Naana and Naani watching from their celestial abode could have been done without.
Of course, I loved the book till the 175th page and many portions kept me laughing till a long time. Like the first chapter where Sartaj goes to meet her friend Saeeda who had just returned after visiting her son's family abroad. Saeeda goes on and on about her grandchildren and Sartaj gets frustrated with irritation plus jealousy. Another is when Sana contemplates suicide and weighs out the different techniques and their cons.
The book is a light read and you can go for it if you are craving for a good laugh. I give Marry Go Round 3.5 on a scale of 5.