Rebecca Kightlinger, Novelist
  • About the Author
  • The Bury Down Chronicles
  • Rowan Moon
  • Historical Fiction Reviews
  • Publications
  • Writers and Writing
  • Literary Awards and Recognition
  Historical Fiction Reviews 


​Rebecca Kightlinger

Before We Visit the Goddess                                                         by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

8/8/2016

0 Comments

 
Picture
​

Before We Visit the Goddess
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, 2016, Simon and Schuster, 210 pp, $25.00, 97847679200






 “Without education,” Sabitri writes to Tara, the granddaughter she has never met, “a woman has little chance of standing on her own feet.” Recalling the desperate maneuver that enabled her own mother to send her to college, Sabitri urges Tara to stay in school. “If you are uneducated, people will look down on you. To survive, you are forced to accept crumbs thrown down from a rich man’s table. How can such a woman ever brighten the family name?”
       Before We Visit the Goddess  opens in Kolkata, India, in 1995, with Sabitri’s epistolary plea to Tara. Deftly blended with third-person narrative, the letter reveals Sabitri’s own ambitions, missteps, and shame, as well as the guts and hard work it took for Sabitri to ensure that her daughter, Bela—Tara’s mother—would have the opportunity to become educated and stand on her own feet.
       When Sabitri lays down her pen, poet Divakaruni shifts the focus to 1963 and eleven-year-old Bela’s lonely, sometimes dreamlike existence with her quarreling parents in Assam, India. Then, leaving Bela in a hospital bed feeling “a shift in the air, an imminent storm,” Divakaruni takes the reader to 1998 and Tara’s unsettled life in Houston.
       This switchback journey from 1963 to 2020, between India and Texas, delivered in richly nuanced narratives, immerses the reader in the unforgettable lives of Sabitri, Bela, Tara, and the friends, lovers, and strangers who change their lives. In exquisitely wrought interwoven stories, each woman finds love, whether romantic, platonic, or filial; each makes an irrevocable choice based on love—or its detritus—and each must one day come to terms with feelings “as unambiguous as a knife” when confronted with the consequences of her choice.

                                                                                                 Rebecca Kightlinger

Originally published in Historical Novels Review,  Online Issue 77, August, 2016.
Citation: Kightlinger, Rebecca. "Before We Visit the Goddess" Historical Novels Review 77 (August 2016)
https://historicalnovelsociety.org/reviews/before-we-visit-the-goddess/

All rights  reserved.

Published Review
visit Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni's website
Picture
0 Comments

    RSS Feed

    Author

    Rebecca Kightlinger
    Member of the National Book Critics Circle

    Categories

    All
    Across The China Sea
    A Deadly Affection
    Adlington: Lucy
    A Fortune Foretold
    A Googly In The Compound
    Alexander: V.S.
    A Million Drops
    Ashes To Ashes: The Chronicles Of Hugh De Singleton
    Bagirov: Togrul
    Beanland: Rachel
    Before We Visit The Goddess
    Bell: Anthea
    Captain Swing And The Blacksmith
    Cash: Wiley
    Charcoal Joe: An Easy Rawlins Mystery
    Cramer: Marina Antropow
    Death Of An Alchemist
    Defectors
    Del Árbol: Víctor
    Desai: Boman
    Divakaruni: Chitra Banerjee
    Florence Adler Swims Forever
    Godpretty In The Tobacco Field
    Great Game
    Heivoll: Gaute
    Ice Cold
    In The Lion's Den
    Joinson: Suzanne
    Kanen: Joseph
    Lawrence: Mary
    Lightningstruck
    Mace Havird: Ashely
    Make A Wish But Not For Money
    Morrell: David
    Mosley: Walter
    Nunnally: Tiina
    Olav Audunsson: Providence
    Overholt: Cuyler
    Parvin: Beatrice
    Pliejel: Agneta
    Richardson: Kim Michele
    Roads
    Ruler Of The Night
    Russell: Craig
    Schenkel: Andrea Maria
    Starr: Mel
    Strempek Shea: Suzanne
    Taylor Bradford: Barbara
    The
    The Book Woman Of Troublesome Creek
    The Devil Aspect
    The Dressmakers Of Auschwitz
    The Girl They Left Behind
    The Last Ballad
    The Lost Girls
    The Photographer's Wife
    The Postmistress Of Paris
    The Sisters Of Glass Ferry
    The Taster
    Translator
    Velatzos: Roxanne
    Young: Heather



"Knowledge wedded to wisdom is power."
                ~ Murga, Seer of Bury Down

Contact Us

Submit
  • About the Author
  • The Bury Down Chronicles
  • Rowan Moon
  • Historical Fiction Reviews
  • Publications
  • Writers and Writing
  • Literary Awards and Recognition