Tara has been married for close to three odd decades now to Deven. Their marriage was one of compromise and in "those" days, arranged marriages were just that. Tara always wanted to study further but as typical Indian households would want it, irrespective if they were in India or anywhere on this planet, would suggest that the daughter of marriageable age first get married and then do whatever she would like with the permission of her husband and new family. Having come to that understanding Tara agrees to be married. But, obviously life does not turn out that way. Deven wants to set up his practice first and Tara's life has to take the back seat. Life moves on. Tara and Deven have two beautiful daughters - Heena & Nikki. Tara brings them up as self sufficient, learned women of the new century.
But, she has one wrong expectation of them - that they live their life, sans marriage, on their own terms and confidently etc. It was wrong to have even be holding the idea that just because her marriage wasn't fair, her daughters should not choose marriage at all.
Heena is married, has twins and has a life of her own.
Nikki is [supposedly] a life coach and now getting engaged to a complete green flag of a person, Jay.
Tara has finally lost all patience and the will to compromise in the name of marriage. So she decides to finally divorce Deven. On the day of Nikki's engagement, lots of things go wrong - one of course is Tara's decision and then all hell breaks loose when the family heirloom ring goes missing. Jay's mother is livid and files a case on Tara.
Tara, in the next few hours and couple of days, has walked out of home, found a trailer vehicle and has hit the road. On her own. To find a life that she had always dreamt of.
This story is not what the blurb says it is. It is not a road trip story. Neither is it a story of mother and daughter going off on some road trip and figuring out life.
The whole book oscillates between what Tara was doing on her journey - finding an old, one-sided love, and basically a get away from frustration and figuring out who she had become. Nikki panics and tries to join her mother on that trailer for sometime but realizes, her life is with Jay and she must go back to where she belongs and continue life.
The entire storyline was about Nikki playing mother and saviour to her mother, Tara. It was constantly cribbing and worrying about what her mother was doing, why was her mother doing what she was doing, why was her mother behaving so selfishly and walking out of a life that she had adjusted and lived so long for etc. etc. The story pulled itself into a flop bollywood movie.
This story line pulled a little too...ooo much for my liking! Thankfully, this was an audio book and I could work on my crochet project and not feel frustrated that I had spent so much time "reading" it. Every time I thought the story was going to end, another chapter started and stretched in painful detail. It was okay to an extent to have a daughter be worried about her mother, but when Nikki starts to constantly whine, the storyline gets irritating. The story tried to give some free advice about how life should be led and what life lessons one must learn, but I don't think anybody even noticed it!
I would not recommend reading this book, though the author has many other books to her name.