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Unless noted otherwise, the books reviewed here were provided by Net Galley.

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Saturday, August 2, 2014

Three Bargains


Set in northern India, “Three Bargains” is decorated with many colorful, not always familiar, words. So many that I underlined them in pencil, when I normally don’t like to write in books, and made my own kind of glossary, thanks to Wikipedia and Wiktionary. Food, clothing, occupations, religious and cultural practices are among these words new to me, yet the clarity of the writing and story-telling is remarkable. Reading about Madan, Avtaar Singh, Jaggu, all of the characters – their personalities are immediate and well-focused. The novel tells Madan’s story through so many events, good, bad, and deadly, and never strays far from the intensity behind this young man. Avtaar Singh – always those two names together, sometimes with the suffix “-ji”, and only once as “Avtaar Uncle,” is a powerful mobster – really, I think that is an accurate comparison. For certain I do not agree with his way of conducting business; much of western culture, too is perhaps at odds with his approach, but to see the way he balanced good and evil, and how this passed on to Madan, is exceptionally well done by Tania Malik. Often Madan thinks that violence upon others will settle his soul, but how can it? That is something I cannot understand, though it is not to say that any of these people are all evil or all good. At times Madan does a good deed to follow the bad one, even involving the same person. Time, too, shapes his outlook, and that of his family as well. There is plenty to think about while, and after, reading this.


I find fiction more difficult to review, because I don’t want to give away too much of the plot. “Three Bargains” reminds me of “The Last Summer of the Death Warriors” by Francisco X. Stork, in a different setting, but with many of these universal, human themes. While it can be upsetting, for the strong emotional twists and turns, it is ultimately a rewarding reading experience. This is a powerful work, and the characters and their actions will stay in my memory for a long time.

Note: I won a copy of this title through Goodreads' First Reads.

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