i believe a book well written is one that makes you feel exactly what it aims for. tara may be the character whose eyes we see the world through, but she is far from being the only main character of the story. the women present are all main characters in their respective ways, different in many facets of life, but one thing joins them, and it is anger.
female rage is splashed across the story like fuel. It's a kindling behind every word, behind every emotion, and behind every action that the women do. be it fighting tooth and nail for her daughter to finish her education, trying to shed and distance oneself from a past that kills unabashedly, or letting the pain gnaw slowly and fester for years, the main drive of the book is pure unfiltered anger that you feel throughout every line.
Hunger and rage are what drive the story forward, are what make it almost impossible to hate tara. as an audience to her bathe to strive for more, we watch her from wanting the simplest things in life to growing incessantly unsatisfied and knowing that her hunger will never subside. Tara strives for one thing, and that is to feel complete, to be able to look at all the times she had been humiliated, and think them to have been worth surviving. however, there is no more dangerous thing than the appetite of the poor, and some watch as tara does her impossible to become the thing she claims to hate but envies.
throughout the book tara kept say my how much she hated those rich housewifes who do nothing all day, while actually meaning that she hates having to go and slave away at a job or for a man, to afford half the lifestyle these other women have. for a projects her feelings of inadequacy on to every other woman she meets, to try to feel superior. she mocks other women for putting on a show to showcase their wealth when she herself does the same thing. she hates any mention or association to her village on it brings her back to being the girl that used to be beaten by her brother, she is put back in a place where she has no power, at the mercy of other men, determined to get away, which makes it all the more morbidly funny when she finds herself later in the book, still at the mercy of the men in her life simply in a different font, but with the illusion of power; be it for her main drive for success is to one up her brother, her deadbeat husband with no backbone mascarading as a modernist, or the countless men who she relies on for income.
even when her big bad villain goes away at the end, there is no sign she feels a sense of relief because her greatest enemy has always been herself.
there is so much i could talk about with the different ways how motherhood is portrayed through the generations, the illusion of women's choices under a patriarchal society, how tara spent so long distancing herself from her village just to end up under the sheets of one, how this man got to feel good about his village as it serves as an inspirational coming of age stories, while women have to feel ashamed and disgusted from where they came from, that tara has this delusion that money will provide her safety and having that proven false with the earthquake... there is so much from this book to dissect it's truly a masterpiece.
final thing i will say is that this book proves that life is a circle, that no matter how fast you try to outrun your family, there will come a day where you will look at a mirror and see them staring back at you, but worse.