Ratings2
Average rating2.5
"A midnight phone call awakens a man to inform him that his sister has died in childbirth. He is told he must keep the orphaned baby girl overnight, until her new, adopting parents can collect her. Over the course of that hot night in Calcutta, the man hurriedly writes stories to the baby sleeping on a blue bedspread in the next room: stories of the family she was born into, stories of the mother she will never know.
Painting half-remembered scenes, he flits between past and present, recounting tales of the shared childhood of a boy and his sister, who muffled their fears in the blueness of that very same bedspread. As the hours pass, the man gradually divulges a layered and transfixing confession of the darkest of family secrets."--BOOK JACKET.
Reviews with the most likes.
I didn't like this book. It was too dis-jointed, with lots of descriptions when there should have been more plot movement.
Sweet home (desi) alabama aside, this was actually a beautifully well written book. If you asked me to explain to you what happens i probably couldn't tell you very well but all I know is that colonial Calcutta setting, middle class Indian upbringing and the weirdness undertones delivered in an eloquent writing style captivated me for the time I read this.