Review by Booklist Review
Tamarind longs to know more about her mother, who died when she was a baby, but her father is uncomfortable talking about her. So when Tamarind has the opportunity to visit her mother's family in India for the first time, she seizes it. Staying in their large country home for a week, she comes to love her grandmother and learns to avoid the cousin who instantly dislikes her, but her relatives are reluctant to talk with her about her mother's life, too. Gradually, she's pulled into an otherworld by a girl she meets in the garden at night. Drawing closer to her mother in both dimensions, she gains the elusive sense of belonging that she needs. Tamarind's story unfolds in a first-person narrative that reveals her yearning, her discomfort while adjusting to a different culture, and her courage in taking risks to reach her goal. While the realistic conversations with family members are informative and move the story forward, young readers may find the vivid, magical night scenes more compelling. An intriguing intergenerational family story.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Raised in England by her Indian father, Tamarind never knew her seldom-discussed mother, Chinty, who died from an illness shortly after her birth. But when her father and new stepmother, Chloe, who cues as white, leave for their honeymoon, Tamarind is sent to meet her late mother's family and visit India for the first time, spending a week during monsoon season in the family's Himalayan mansion. She arrives with big feelings--including resentment of Chloe as well as curiosity about her cultural heritage and her mother. But her extended family proves as mum as her father about the details of Chinty's life and death. Tamarind meets an enigmatic spirit, Ishta, in the atmospheric mansion's luxuriant gardens. As Tamarind works to accept changes, Ishta provides her with answers about her mother's life and death--and allows the family to confront their frozen grief. In Bilan's (Aarti & the Blue Gods) supernatural-leaning contemporary novel, lushly descriptive prose, presented in Tamarind's reportorial first-person voice, underlines the book's essential themes of family and heritage, while a sensitive excavation of loss and family dynamics grounds the title's otherworldly elements. Ages 8--12. (June)
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Review by School Library Journal Review
Gr 3--7--British actor Seema Bowri makes her narrating debut, her crisp, youthful voice an ideal match for 11-year-old Tamarind, a Bristol, England-raised girl meeting her late mother's family for the first time. Her father, recently remarried and on his way to his honeymoon, arranges to leave Tamarind in the Himalayan mansion her mother once called home. Tamarind's initial nervousness is quickly eased by the palpable welcome, especially from her grandmother and nine-year-old cousin Arjun. She might have even made a new friend in the sprawling, overgrown gardens. While Tamarind yearns to learn more about her mother, no one seems willing to share any memories. From mythical cities to the ancient goddess Ishtar, Bilan seamlessly infuses her sophomore middle grade novel with just enough mayhem and magic. VERDICT Bowri warmly enhances Tamarind's quest for answers and understanding.
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