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304 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2012
“Not being able to speak Bengali makes me feel like I’m trying to cross a bridge but can only get so far, because to reach the other side it’s not just the words you need to understand, but also the tones and colours; the way of thinking and seeing the world that are all locked inside the languages.”
“I think these stories about where you come from and the history of your own family help you to see where you stand in the world.”
~~~
“I nod at him and look down, down, down to the crater below, swirling with dust.
‘What is that?’ I ask him.
‘History…takes time to settle.”
"Everything I was before, all the forever-things, are slipping away from me here under Jasmine Skies."
This is actually much better and more understanding than the first one. I had a hard time keeping up with what's happening in Artichoke Hearts due to the fact that that book and I aren't compatible with each other since I have read the first half of it.
In here, it starts off to the point where Mira Levenson is on her own to travel to Kolkata, India to spend at least two weeks with her aunt and second cousin. But then, she's not only there to explore Kolkata but to learn and discover the buried secrets that has been kept so long from both her mom and her aunt.
["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>I hadn't read the earlier book in the series, but enough is explained that it works well as a standalone. The characters are engaging (I'd love to see Priya get her own book!), and the descriptions of Kolkata life are very evocative. There's a little bit of run-on clunkiness in the opening airport scene, and there's some lack of clarity in the scene where Janu is introduced. (For most of the book I thought he was much older than Mira, which would have been creepy and a much different story.) I plan to go back to the earlier book, and see where future volumes go.