The Konkans is about a young man named Francisco D'Sai and the D'Sai family. Francisco comes from the Konkan people of Goa India, a group of Catholic people converted by Vasco de Gama. His mother, Denise, is an American who traveled to India as a member of the Peace Corps. There she met Francisco's father, Lawrence, whose family embraced his mother. Denise's came from rough family life and welcomed being part of Lawrence's family. She fell in love with India and wanted desperately to feel like part of a culture. Lawrence initially resisted being set up with Denise because he was in love with another woman, but felt compelled to begin a relationship with Denise through pressure from his father. In Konkan culture, the first born son has a duty to take care of the family. The story is told through the point of view of a narrator, a character we do not know, in past tense.
When Denise and Lawrence move back to Chicago, they work out a plan to bring Lawrence's brothers, Sam and Lesley, to the US. They hatch a plan to sneak them in through Canada. Once there, they begin to seek the "American dream". Lawrence desperately seeks upward mobility, making sacrifices to his cultural heritage, enduring cultural and systemic racism and xenophobia, and sacrificing time with his family and his wife for professional and social advancement. He craves the finer things; nice cars, country club memberships, acceptance in mainstream, white society. Denise longs for the simpler things and the freedom and joy that she felt in India. She and Sam begin spending more and more time together and initiate an affair, which lasts for years.
Eventually, they cease their affair, and have a falling out. Sam meets an African American woman that he falls in love with, but is not accepted by his family. He breaks up with her and is set up with an arranged marriage back in India. When they return to the US, Sam becomes more erratic, angry, resentful and hostile to his new wife and his family around him.
By the end, everyone in the story is embittered and angry about the trajectory of their lives. Denise wishes that she had met Sam and they had stayed in India. Lawrence wishes for acceptance that can't be possible. Despite having all of the trappings and conveniences of a comfortable life, happiness does not exist for the D'Sai's.
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I picked this book up at Crown Books, in Horton Plaza. I was at jury duty downtown and while on a break, I found this used book store. I had heard of Tony D'Souza and (according to records) had read Whiteman while in France, though I do not remember it. I picked up the book and read it furiously, finishing it a few short weeks later close to Thanksgiving break.