We are pleased to participate in THE HENNA ARTIST Blog Tour. THE HENNA ARTIST is a new historical fiction novel from debut author, Alka Joshi.
✤✤ BOOK SUMMARY ✤✤
After fleeing an arranged marriage as a fifteen year old to an
abusive older man, Lakshmi Shastri steals away alone from her rural village to
Jaipur. Here, against odds, she carves out a living for herself as a henna
artist, and friend and confidante to wealthy, upper caste women. Surviving by
her wits and talents, she shares her knowledge and keeps their secrets in a
delicate balancing act amid the changing 1950s social mores brought about by
Indian Independence. Vulnerable to opinion and innuedo, at any point her intentions
might be misunderstood, and she could fall prey to a damaged reputation or
worse. Still Lakshmi manages to save to build a house with the dream of
bringing her aging parents here to live with her and redeem herself in their
eyes. Then one day her ex-husband arrives in town seeking her out with a girl
in tow, a sister she did not know she had. Her sister is both passionate and
reckless by nature, and all of a sudden the caution that Lakshmi has carefully
cultivated is threatened, along with her livelihood. But she preseveres, and in
doing so manages to lift up the others around her with her success.
Lakshmi's tenacity and spirit see her join the ranks of other
brave women of historical fiction, such as Farough Farrokhzad in Jasmin
Darznik's Song of a Captive Bird.With gorgeous prose and urgent themes,
the novel will captivate readers of Shobha Rao's Girls Burn Brighter,
and those who seek a narrative both compelling and necessary.
✤✤ BUY LINKS ✤✤
✤✤ ABOUT THE AUTHOR ✤✤
Alka Joshi is a graduate of Stanford University and received her M.F.A. from the California College of the Arts. She has worked as an advertising copywriter, a marketing consultant, and an illustrator. Alka was born in India, in the state of Rajasthan. Her family came to the United States when she was nine, and she now lives on California's Monterey Peninsula with her husband and two misbehaving pups. The Henna Artist is her first novel. Visit her website and blog at thehennaartist.com
✤✤ CONNECT WITH ALKA JOSHI ✤✤
✤✤ REVIEW ✤✤
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Set in Jaipur shortly after India's independence from the British, we see a country at a pivotal crossroad. It's a country that's rebuilding itself with renewed pride in its deep cultural history as it faces encroaching influences from Western culture through cinema and even from rich families who have the luxury of education abroad. It's in this new world that we meet Laskshmi, a talented but unassuming young woman who has modest dreams of building and owning her own home. She's far removed from her previous life as a wife in a poor village where she fled an unhappy marriage, leaving family behind to pursue something she felt she was meant to do. Her travels took her far and she eventually made her way to Jaipur where she earns her living as a henna artist whose talents are much-sought after by the elite women of the city. Lakshmi has quietly worked with these ladies over the years, listening and observing, learning much about them and their families. The delicate network of families is as intricate and elaborate as the impressive henna designs that have garnered Lakshmi such wide esteem. While she has earned a decent living so far, she yearns for more stability and perhaps some clout within the community. Lakshmi hopes to attain that by helping to arrange a marriage between two influential families. She has to work astutely because reputation and propriety are of utmost importance. As soon as she has laid the invaluable groundwork, her own personal life threatens to jeopardize her dreams. Out of nowhere, her husband appears bringing along a younger teenaged sister she did not know existed. Their presence throws things into tumult now because Lakshmi has to appease a scorned husband who seeks money from her, and a sister who has nothing left in the world but her.
I was drawn into this beautifully and succinctly detailed world from the very first page. The descriptions of Jaipur during the '50s seemed almost otherworldly to me, far removed from what little I know of Indian history. Looking up pictures of the Pink City, my eyes just consumed all the beauty and majesty of the architecture. Having these pictures in my mind, I could easily see Lakshmi maneuvering her way around the city. There's a quiet certainty about her that I found was comforting and impressive. The independence she forged for herself and life she created are vastly different from any assumptions one may about women living in India at that time. There's so much that Joshi nicely fits in about this period regarding society from the caste system to the power players. I think The Henna Artist's strongest appeal is the women. The privileged clientele Lakshmi encounters have interesting backgrounds and they've cleverly shaped their lives to suit them within the confines of society and marriage. There's Pavarti, an influential socialite amongst the women whose favour Lakshmi seeks and relies on. Kanta, a close friend to Lakshmi, is a young well-to-do wife and espouses a lot of the western culture infiltrating India. The majarani runs a prestigious school for girls that offers unbelievable opportunities that most young Indian girls could only dream of. There's a clear distinction between the haves and have nots and how the rules apply differently as witnessed when Lakshmi interacts with women who are poorer, doing her best for them. These are only a few of the women throughout the book who seek out Lakshmi not only for her talents but also discretion in extremely personal matters. Her covert expertise in traditional medicine and healing is highly valued though whispered about in circles.
The Henna Artist is a sublime and stunning historical fiction debut that not only captivates you but also moves you. I often say that as I've grown older, I've become more open-minded about how women choose their own path in life. I used to have a one-size-fits-all mentality but reading The Henna Artist has re-enforced the beauty of women finding their own way, taking as many turns as they need to get to where they eventually need to be, where they find their purpose. Nothing encapsulates that more to me than this beautiful, poetic line:
The Henna Artist is one of my favourite novels to come out this year. Fall in love with this must-read treasure!
~ Bel
* I received an advance e-galley from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.
✤✤ EXCERPT ✤✤
Prologue
September 1955
Ajar, State of Uttar
Pradesh, India
Her feet step lightly on the
hard earth, calloused soles insensible to the tiny pebbles and caked mud along
the riverbank. On her head she balances a mutki,
the same earthenware jug she uses to carry water from the well every day.
Today, instead of water, the girl is carrying everything she owns: a second
petticoat and blouse, her mother’s wedding sari, The Tales of Krishna her father used to read to her—the pages
fabric-soft from years of handling—and the letter that arrived from Jaipur
earlier this morning.
When she hears the voices of the
village women in the distance, the girl hesitates. The gossip-eaters are chatting,
telling stories, laughing, as they wash saris, vests, petticoats and dhotis. But when they spot her, she knows
they will stop to stare or spit at the ground, imploring God to protect them
from the Bad Luck Girl. She reminds herself of the letter, safe inside the mutki, and thinks: Let them. It will be the last time.
Yesterday, the women were
haranguing the Headman: why is the Bad Luck
Girl still living in the schoolteacher’s hut when we need it for the new schoolmaster?
Afraid to make a sound for fear they would come inside and pull her out by her
hair, the girl had remained perfectly still within the four mud walls. There
was no one to protect her now. Last week, her mother’s body had been burned
along with the bones of other dead animals, the funeral pyre of the poor. Her
father, the former schoolteacher, had abandoned them six months ago, and,
shortly after, he drowned in a shallow pool of water along the riverbank, so
drunk he likely hadn’t felt the sting of death.
Every day for the past week, the
girl had lay in wait on the outskirts of the village for the postman, who
cycled in sporadically from the neighboring village. This morning, as soon as
she spotted him, she darted out from her hiding place, startling him, and asked
if there were any letters for her family. He had frowned and bit his cheek, his
rheumy eyes considering her through his thick glasses. She could tell he felt
sorry for her, but he was also peeved—she was asking for something only the
Headman should receive. But she held his gaze without blinking. When he finally
handed over the thick onionskin envelope addressed to her parents, he did so
hastily, avoiding her eyes and pedaling away as quickly as he could.
Now, standing tall, her
shoulders back, she strolls past the women at the riverbank. They glare at her.
She can feel her heart flutter wildly in her breast, but she passes, straight
as sugar cane, mutki on her head, as
if she is going to the farmers well, two miles farther from the village, the
only well she is allowed to use.
The gossip-eaters no longer
whisper but shout to one another: There
goes the Bad Luck Girl! The year she was born, locusts ate the wheat! Her older
sister deserted her husband, never to be seen again! Shameless! That same year
her mother went blind! And her father turned to drink! Disgraceful! Even the
girl’s coloring is suspect. Only Angreji-walli
have blue eyes. Does she even belong to us? To this village?
The girl has often wondered
about this older sister they talk about. The one whose face she sees only as a
shadow in her dreams, whose existence her parents have never acknowledged. The
gossip-eaters say she left the village thirteen years ago. Why? Where did she
go? How did she escape a place where the gossip-eaters watch your every move?
Did she leave in the dead of night when the cows and goats were asleep? They
say she stole money, but no one in the village has any money. How did she feed
herself? Some say she dressed as a man so she wouldn’t be stopped on the road.
Others say she ran off with a circus boy and was living as a nautch girl, dancing in the Pleasure
District miles away in Agra.
Three days ago, old man Munchi
with the game leg—her only friend in the village—warned her that if she didn’t vacate
her hut, the Headman would insist she marry a widowed farmer or demand she
leave the village.
“There is nothing here for
you now,” Munchiji had said. But how could she leave—a thirteen-year-old orphan
girl with no family or money?
Munchiji said, “Have courage,
bheti.” He told her where to find her brother-in-law, the husband her older sister
had abandoned all those years ago, in a nearby village. Perhaps he could help her find her
sister.
“Why can’t I stay with
you?” she had asked.
“It would not be proper,” the old man replied
gently. He made his living painting images on the skeletons of peepal leaves. To console her, he’d given her a painting. Angry, she’d almost
thrown it back at him until she saw that the image was of Lord Krishna, feeding
a mango to his consort Radha, her namesake. It was the most beautiful gift she
had ever received.
Radha slows as she approaches
the village threshing ground. Four yoked bulls walk in circles around a large
flat stone, grinding wheat. Prem,
who cares for the bulls, is sitting with his back against the hut, asleep. Quietly,
she hurries past him to the narrow path that leads to Ganesh-ji’s temple. The
shrine has a slender opening and, inside, a statue of Lord Ganesh. Gifts are
arranged around the Elephant God’s feet: a young coconut, marigolds, a small
pot of ghee, slices of mango. A cone of sandalwood incense releases a languid
curl of smoke.
The
girl lays Munchiji’s painting of Krishna in front
of Ganesh-ji, the Remover of All
Obstacles, and begs him to remove the curse of The Bad Luck Girl.
By the time she reaches her
brother-in-law’s village ten miles to the West, it is late afternoon and the
sun has moved closer to the horizon. She is sweating through her cotton blouse.
Her feet and ankles are dusty; her mouth dry.
She is cautious, entering the
village. She crouches in shrubs and hides behind trees. She knows an alone girl
will not be treated kindly. She searches for a man who looks like the one
Munchiji described.
She sees him. There. Squatting under
the banyan tree, facing her. Her brother-in-law.
He has thick, oily, coal-black
hair. A long, bumpy scar snakes from his bottom lip to his chin. He is not
young but neither is he old. His bush-shirt
is spotted with curry and his dhoti is
stained with dust.
Then she notices the woman
squatting in the dirt in front of the man. She is supporting her elbow with one
hand, her forearm dangling at an unnatural angle. Her head is completely
covered with her pallu, and she is
talking to the man in a quiet whisper. Radha watches, wondering if her
brother-in-law has taken another wife.
She picks up a small stone and
throws it at him. She misses. The second time, she hits him in the thigh, but
he merely flicks his hand, as if swatting away an insect. He is listening
intently to the woman. Radha throws more pebbles, managing to hit him several
times. At last, he lifts his head and looks around him.
Radha steps into the clearing so
he can see her.
His eyes widen, as if he is
looking at a ghost. He says, “Lakshmi?”
Excerpted from The
Henna Artist by Alka Joshi, Copyright © 2020 by Alka Joshi. Published by
MIRA Books.
I really enjoyed this book too. Great review - thanks for sharing :)
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