Wedding of Jayanthi Mandel

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A01=Sara Banerji
arranged marriage of convenience
Author_Sara Banerji
bride
calcutta
Category=FBA
drama
eq_bestseller
eq_fiction
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_modern-contemporary
eq_nobargain
female protagonist
heroine
hopeless romantic
humor
humour
india
indian woman main character
irony
new money
nouveau riche
police
powerful rich family
scheme
violence
wedding day

Product details

  • ISBN 9781448208371
  • Weight: 297g
  • Dimensions: 153 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 20 Dec 2012
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Mandel family is rich, powerful and superstitious. Twenty years ago things were very different when they arrived in Calcutta, starving and penniless, intent on making their fortune. Now, Papa Mandel, ruthless architect of the Mandel success story, is dead but his spirit lives on in his unwitting daughter Jayanthi.

Jayanthi is an avid reader of romantic magazines, and the plans for her marriage -a marriage of convenience which will further extend the Mandel influence -seem depressingly loveless to her; the more so as the wedding day approaches and increasingly bloody events surround the Mandel clan as they jostle for power.

Observing the gathering pandemonium and providing a bemused commentary on events is Police Deputy Babu, a sycophant by nature, whose attempts to gain promotion are continually thwarted, and whose efforts to keep in with the Mandels are largely self-defeating.

The violence and scheming and confusion come to a head on the day of Jayanthis wedding - but no one, not even the spirit of Papa Mandel, has predicted the extraordinary course the day is to take.

The Wedding of Jayanthi Mandel is an original and powerful work. The authentic feel of India is caught - its extremes, its mysticism, its beauty, the voices of its people. And underlying the drama is a detached and ironic humour which both illuminates and enriches this remarkable novel.

The daughter of a novelist, Sara Banerji spent part of her childhood in the African bush. She married an Oxford under­graduate from India and they spent the first seventeen years of their married life in the South Indian Hills tea planting and bring­ing up three daughters. During that time Sara rode as a jockey on the flat and held exhibitions of her paintings in Madras and Delhi.

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