The View Was Exhausting follows Hollywood upcomer Whitman ‘Win’ Tagore and Leo Milanowski’s mutually beneficial friends-with-benefits fake dating on-off relationship. They rely on each other as the big guns when things inevitably go awry in their lives and they need a boost of some good publicity.
Off the bat, what I liked about the book was the way it attempts to address Indian actors and actresses in Hollywood. I grew up rarely seeing anyone who looked like me on the screen, and if I did, it was some sort of a caricature of a person, an exemplification of all the Indian stereotypes (think, taxi driver or a super computer nerd, or gas station owner or whatever) There was specifically a line that made me realize, ‘If the one actor/actress fails, its seen as representative for the rest of the community, and there won’t be another chance taken on the community for a while longer” which stuck with me and I think was a good point to have made, when looking at careers of other indians, the first coming to mind being Priyanka Chopra.
A book can be interesting and still have nothing to say and I found this to be true for this book. I loved Leo and Win’s relationship, I thought they had real chemistry and knew they were doomed from the start. As a part of an Indian diaspora I also understood the hardships Win faced, I felt her as an interesting character, icy and cold and aloof at times but also warm and real and caring and I felt captivated by her. However, overall I felt the book lacked a lot of substance. I found myself saying ‘so-what’ fairly often. I don’t really think a lot of character development occurred, I found a lot of the plot to be monotonous. Leo’s brother’s character didn’t feel fully fleshed out either. To me, it felt unfinished. Plotlines were wrapped in a quick sort of manner that I’d maybe have preferred to be drawn out, or eliminated entirely. In the words of a friend, it felt like nothing happened and then something happened but at the same time nothing was happening.
(edited)
changing to 2.5 stars from 3 because while I did find myself enjoying the storyline, and respected the attempt for diversity/inclusion, there were definitely things I would change and i would be hesitant to recommend