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YOGA

A LOVE STORY

One man’s personal and spiritual adventure makes for a profound and intriguing tale.

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In this debut novel set in the late 1980s, a young Indian American, descended from a Buddhist saint, falls in love on his path to bringing enlightenment to the world.

John Yogacara Asanga, born to an Indian father and American mother, endures his fair share of racism in Kokomo, Indiana. After his dad dies and his mom remarries, the teenager leaves home to explore the world, starting with Chicago. He finally finds acceptance with the El Quawai gang, which runs drugs and forces girls to become sex workers. But before long, he embarks on the next part of his journey in India. Immediately smitten with Aanya Devi Ghosa, a local Indian Buddhist and widow, at an ashram, he tries to surpass her other suitors. But John has a destiny, the one his father once sought to fulfill; he wishes “to reveal to Westerners truths that emanate from the East.” A council of kings allows him to become an emissary but first tasks him with retrieving the Antahkarana, an Indian relic stolen long ago. Aanya joins John on his quest to the Kaziranga jungle, a spiritual mission that involves facing a demigod and restoring the bridge between humankind and God. Davis’ captivating novel opens with a lengthy coming-of-age tale. John falls in love twice, indulges in cocaine in Chicago, and winds up entangled in an FBI investigation. Amazingly, the story hardly slows down when he reaches India, as he competes with a prince to win Aanya’s affections and soon begins his quest. The author exalts Eastern religions, presenting such notions and sights as a “tiger-sorceress” as genuine, never otherworldly. At the same time, he deftly grounds the protagonist. Wherever he goes, John is an outcast—too dark-skinned for bigoted American schoolmates but not a “pure” Indian in Ladakh. This book unfortunately falters with a few mistakes; for example, John’s father’s death prompted the teen’s Kokomo departure in June 1988. But readers later learn that his father died in October of that year.

One man’s personal and spiritual adventure makes for a profound and intriguing tale.

Pub Date: May 10, 2021

ISBN: 978-9-39-026020-1

Page Count: 256

Publisher: Rupa Publications

Review Posted Online: April 15, 2022

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HOW TO READ A BOOK

A finely wrought story, beautifully told, with deeply memorable characters.

After accidentally causing the death of a fellow driver, a Maine woman does time in prison and then reestablishes her life on the outside.

Violet Powell was just 19, drunk and high, when she caused the death of Lorraine Daigle, a beloved mother and kindergarten teacher. She is convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to 28 months in prison. Though she thinks she won’t be able to survive, she does. Prison turns out to be excruciating and monotonous, and while she’s serving time, Troy, her “boyfriend-slash-fiancé-slash-future-slash-everything,” never writes or visits. Even worse, her mother dies and her family blames her. The book club that meets every Friday is her solace, along with Kitten, Jennie Big, Aimee, Dawna-Lynne, and the seven other members of the group. The discussions, in which Violet and her fellow inmates get to exert some control over their lives by complaining about books, are a brief respite. Harriet, the former teacher who leads the group, and the other women are willing to see Violet’s humanity. Violet, who will never forgive herself for her bad choices, is both the best of herself and the worst of herself at every moment. When she’s released, her sister drops her in Portland with a prepaid one-year lease on a furnished apartment, money, clothes, and the information that no one in her town or family can forgive her or wants to see her again. She must find her own way. A chance meeting with Harriet in a bookstore turns into an unexpected meeting with Frank Daigle, husband of the woman whose death she caused. This gorgeously told story follows the first few months after Violet’s release, what she calls the shimmering time, as she tries to define herself on the outside. And at first, only Harriet and Frank are willing to see her for who she is.

A finely wrought story, beautifully told, with deeply memorable characters.

Pub Date: May 7, 2024

ISBN: 9780063243675

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Mariner Books

Review Posted Online: March 9, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: April 1, 2024

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MAYBE NEXT TIME

A story of mindfulness and joy in the small routines of love and family.

A harried London woman lives the same day over and over again, with her husband always dying at 10:17 p.m.

Time fragments and collides in this story encompassing the first meeting, marriage, child-rearing, lockdown, and post-lockdown lives of Emma and Dan, a married couple in their early 40s. The first time Dan dies, Emma is a harried literary agent so focused on her work, volunteering, and support of everyone outside her family that she has forgotten the anniversary of her first meeting with Dan and missed the clues that something is very amiss with both of their children and their dog. Dan is crushed that she's forgotten the anniversary—she's the one who suggested they celebrate every year with heartfelt letters to one another. He’s written to her every year since—including the year he moved out because of his grief over losing his mother and his inability to be the parent to his newborn daughter that he should have been. Author Major has told Dan’s story of his and Emma’s lives together, and his love and frustrations with his partner's complexities, through these annual letters. Emma’s story of growth and change is told through her first-person account of living that single day over and over again. Dan always dies, but Emma's experience of her relationship with him and her family changes as she relives every day. Fans of the 1998 movie Sliding Doors will enjoy this book. Experiences of anguish, depression, grief, and anger as well as those of patience, love, acceptance, and peace are all addressed.

A story of mindfulness and joy in the small routines of love and family.

Pub Date: March 7, 2023

ISBN: 9780063239920

Page Count: 384

Publisher: Morrow/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Feb. 22, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2023

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