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Vee Kumari

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Vee Kumari grew up in the south of India. A lover of books, her favorite authors were Arthur Conan Doyle and Agatha Christie. She would hide to read, to avoid her mother, who might want her to do a chore or two. It was her mother who directed her to use the dictionary to learn the meanings of new words and construct sentences with them. Vee wanted to become an English professor but went to medical school, where she excelled.
Upon coming to the US, Vee got a doctorate in Anatomy and became a faculty member at the UC Davis Medical Center, where I worked for over 35 years and later at the Keck School of Medicine for five years. Teaching neuroanatomy to medical students became another passion for her. She published many scientific papers and won several teaching awards. During this time, I continued to read contemporary mystery fiction.
When she retired in 2012, she took classes from The Gotham Writers’ Workshop and UCLA Writers Program and had the privilege to have authors Lynn Hightower and Caroline Leavitt as her mentors. “Dharma, A Rekha Rao Mystery” is her debut fiction that incorporates her observations on the lives of Indian immigrants and Indian Americans in the US.
Vee lives in Burbank near her daughters and their families. I am also an actor who has appeared in TV shows, including Criminal Minds and Glow and produced and was the lead in a short film, Halwa, which garnered first prize in HBO’s 2019 APAV contest.
She is at work on her next novel about an Indian immigrant family whose American dream shatters when one of their twin daughters goes missing.

DHARMA Cover
MYSTERY & CRIME

DHARMA

BY Vee Kumari • POSTED ON March 13, 2020

An amateur sleuth investigates the murders of her father and her university mentor.

The star of this debut mystery is Rekha Rao, an Indian American art history professor caught in the middle of a violent nightmare. The Southern California–based story opens with Rao being unceremoniously notified by police about the heinous murder of her mentor, archaeology professor Joseph Faust. He was bludgeoned to death with a Hindu goddess statue possibly absconded from his excavation site in India. Rao is asked to assist in supplying information on a possible motive for Faust’s murder, but she’s still reeling from the devastatingly traumatic effects of the senseless killing of her own father, a physician bludgeoned to death in his clinic just three years earlier. That homicide became even more complex after a janitor was arrested for the crime. But when Rao insisted the accused was innocent and that police reopen the case, they refused. When one of her students is brought in for questioning and then arrested in connection with Faust’s murder, Rao knows she needs to work fast to find answers as various suspicions, accusations, and suspects (including Faust’s wife and his cross-dressing son) begin orbiting the criminal inquiry. Rao also becomes increasingly frustrated with the general pace of the police-led investigation and, against Pasadena Police Detective Al Newton’s advice, begins her own amateur sleuthing, which puts her directly in harm’s way.

Rao is an instantly likable character whose respect for her family and her Indian heritage makes her a courageous, determined, reliable, believable, and humanitarian heroine for readers to cheer as she perilously attempts to piece together both crimes. “My goal to take care of all my dharmas was not a facetious one,” the protagonist reflects. Her undeniable attraction to the confident, handsome senior homicide detective creates some added romantic tension and another layer of intrigue to the narrative. Playing out over the course of just a few months, the story demonstrates Kumari’s uncanny knack for putting all of her characters and crimes in place and tying up loose ends in an economy of pages. Combining Hinduism, Hindu mythology, old jealousies and grudges, family melodrama, hidden secrets, and another death, the novel presents a winning recipe for an absorbing read. While the tale has many plot elements continuously spinning, the academic-turned–actress-and-author keeps a firm grip on the main plotline, which she skillfully and quite suspensefully brings to a boil once the perpetrator of Faust’s death is established and the race for justice moves into full swing. Though a newcomer to the mystery genre, Kumari establishes herself here as a writer with ingenuity. She presents a satisfying crime tale with appealing characters who embody vivid and unique cultural perspectives. Delivering a smoothly written, impressive series opener, the author is a new mystery writer to watch.

A polished, confident whodunit brimming with personality and the right amount of intrigue and mayhem.

Pub Date: March 13, 2020

ISBN: 978-1-938394-42-3

Page count: 302pp

Publisher: Great Life Press

Review Posted Online: April 28, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 1, 2020

Awards, Press & Interests

Day job

Writer/Actor/Human

Favorite author

Sujata Massey

Favorite book

A Place For Us

Favorite line from a book

At the end of December 2015, winter had not yet reached Brooklyn.

Favorite word

fortuitous

Hometown

Trivandrum

Passion in life

Live the creative life to the best of my abiltiy!

Unexpected skill or talent

Excellent cook of south Indian dishes

DHARMA: A REKHA RAO MYSTERY: Finalist, Chanticleer International Book Award, 2019, 2019

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