I'd like to start by saying that I although I actually did not much like this book, I feel it's topic of being gay in India, with societal and familial pressures is so important that even if the book had some flaws, those flaws should not stop you from reading it. It's important that the challenges of being gay in India are known by everyone for the same reason it's important for the challenges of any minority group to be known: it builds empathy and promotes change.
That said, the book does indeed have flaws.
1) The main character Ved is rich, his family is rich. Basically upper class, like less than 5% of India upper class. This skews his life experience in many ways from how long he was able to hold off becoming engaged to his outlets for stress and physical needs. The vast majority of gay Indians have things much harder and are left with far fewer options than Ved had as a closeted gay man.
2) All the characters, especially Ved, seem one-dimensional and shallow. While the story does mention that Ved was bullied and a past lover hurt him, the level of despair and emotional damage he seems to carry comes across as greater than one would expect. That damage seemingly causes him to not handle stress at all, pushes him to addictive and risky behaviors, and puts him in a place where he cannot act in his own best interests let alone his new boyfriend's interests or the interests of the person he's pressured to marry until things explode. He's 38 but many of his actions and choices seem like those of a teenager or someone in their early to mid-20s.
3) I agree with others who say that the coming out aspect of the story had an incredibly slow burn, with numerous freak outs, self-doubtings, breakdowns, lies, and self-inflicted guilt trips along the way. Too many, really. Those become the real drama of the book, the only real conflict, and because there's only so much one can do with this type of conflict, mainly because it's internal for the main character, it grew tiresome and mostly led me to just want to shake Ved. Don't get me wrong. I know coming out is hard, and I cannot even imagine doing that when you could be disowned, even arrested, beaten, even killed if things turned very grim. But, given the family Ved was in, his personal circumstances, such physical repercussions seemed unlikely. His parents both loved him and cared for him. His parents were like angels all things considered. His turmoil was self inflicted. Which doesn't make it all less genuine, but when you have to read page after page of the main character freaking out inside his own head, while continuing to make bad choice after bad choice, it gets tiresome.
4) The book needed a firmer edit, in my opinion. There were actual errors like when one character says his mother died when he was a teenager and then a few paragraphs later, the same character says his mother has come to grips with him being gay and is supportive "to this day." There are some improbable aspects like Ved thinking people will think he is insane for walking along the road in Mumbai. Millions of people walk along the roads all across India. I get that it's an experience a rich person like Ved may not have had but he surely would have seen people walking along the roads as he traversed to and from office, gym, etc. A good edit may have whittled down some of the internal freaking out to a more manageable and tolerable level. And a good edit may have fixed the time issues I experienced. In the beginning, the flashbacks were a challenge because you were in Ved's memories and the abruptly back in the present day without a segue, verb tense change, or even a line break in almost all cases. Later, it became hard to believe what all these people did in a single day. Planning engagement parties, clothes fittings, dinners, lunches, coffee breaks, sightseeing, clubbing, sex, and don't forget the hours of internal freaking out. By the time the real resolution took place, I was quite shocked that Ved and the boyfriend had only spent 2 weeks together. It felt like months. Even within the present day parts of the story, time seemed both fluid and elusive. Ved regularly got up by 6 AM and then worked and spent time with the boyfriend, fiance, family, work, gym etc. until well past midnight almost every day. This guy barely slept. Then there was the fact that he and the boyfriend seemed able to skip out on work at any hour most of the time. I get that Ved was rich and practically owned the company, but he had tasks, responsibilities at the office. And the boyfriend would also be getting up by 6 AM and somehow sightseeing at that hour. I live in India. . .except for temples, not many sightseeing places open before 9 or 10 AM! How was he seeing 2-3 sightseeing places before 10 AM? Then he would also go to work, then skip off to meet Ved, more sightseeing, clubbing etc. How did they manage to do so little work and still get paid or not get into trouble?
I confess, I spent at least an hour in total rolling my eyes while reading this book, and saying "what?""really?" and "oh, pleaaaassse!!!" There were times when I really wanted to just give it up. But, like I said, it's theme is important. The challenges it outlined, though drawn out and semi less believable for rich Ved, are important to bear witness to. And I feel for tens of thousands of LGBTQ+ people who are still "closeted" but really wishing they could come out, live freely and authentically, be accepted and even celebrated, but who stay closeted for fear of family and society repercussions, this was an important story.
#HappyPride!