Review of Malika
Gandhi’s
Where the Secret
Lies
Reviewed
by Roy Murry
India
is still a mysterious place to most people in the west even though its
population is over one billion. This
ambiguous thinking on the part of us Americans and others is due to the lack of
understanding of India’s culture which emanates from the Hindi and Muslim
religions.
Ms.
Malika Gandhi’s Where the Secret Lies, in a two story package, allows her reader
into that culture. One story is the
romantic journey of a young lady vacationing in India from England with her
Indian family, circa 2000. The other is
that of a young lady’s plight during the conflicts of the Indian and Pakistani
partition in 1947. The stories converge
into an unlikely ending.
Ms.
Gandhi’s stories are well thought out and detail so the reader will not get
lost in cultural differences. Love is
the same in all cultures. It’s only the
norms set down by our elders that dictate how we are to love. Here is where Malika has shined in her
storytelling.
The
romantic clashes make one think – how could this be? In both stories the love triangles are full of
emotional conflicts, because of the cultural miss understanding of the parties
involved in a male dominated world vs. the new world order where women have
their say in their destiny.
Ms.
Gandhi’s two stories converge because of one common element. That being, the young lady of present has a
common spirit with the young lady of the past.
And that mysterious question is answered when a door that has been
unopened for years, because of a murder, is opened by a spirit.
I
enjoyed Ms. Malika Gandhi’s tale on two levels. One being the way she explains
the culture of India through her prose and the other being the detail of that
prose.
Ms.
Gandhi’s links are below in her interview: http://bit.ly/130CEiq