(read in french, under the title « La Danseuse du Temple »)
« But it started so well ! » After a more than engaging beginning where we get to know the characters in an all than peaceful road-trip, we have to wait the very last part of the book to fin again the same suspense, the same fear for the protagonists, the same uncertainty about their destiny.
Because even if sometimes, we'd slap them (all of them, no exception !), we grow attached to those lost souls : Lucinda discovering the world and love with a gorgeous dark out of reach guy, Maya just trying to stay alive, Gama in full midlife crisis... Clearly, the characters make the strenght of the book, we hope to see them going trhough hard times, but, like them, don't hope much. There's a lot of gloom in this.
But it's not like if they had much more to do other than being depressed during the looooooong halt than spans on the middle half of the novel. The heroines become besties while talking casually about suicide, the author has on overfxation on eunuch's genitals, the very very bad guys set very very treacherous plans to reach their respective goals... well, it's boring. At least the romance develops. Well, wait, no, it goes back for no reason, the « I love u » are said in a language the other can't understand so things get unnecessarily complicated... We discover later we wouldn't have had a super classy scene at the end without this. Alright, it's clumsily done but forgivable, because Pathan with untied and wet hair is something we definitely don't refuse.
Less forgivable, fatphobia oozes from the pages as soon as some characters appear, as if it was absolutely necessary to talk about their fat everywhere and in the most disgusting way, while the thin characters' physical appearance doesn't get the same focus. And it's not like if those fat characters weren't already despicables by their personalities. See what im trying to say ? Even if it's about the bad guys, there was no need to describe them in a such a way.
So, there's quite a pile of thing that, added to each other, make this journey through India not as pleasant as we expected, despite very endearing characters and a good bittersweet ending.