Review: Honor

Honor

Honor
By Thrity Umrigar
Algonquin Books,9781643753300, 2022, 352 pp.

The Short of It:

Weighty.

The Rest of It:

In Honor, Indian American journalist Smita has returned to India to cover a story, but reluctantly: long ago she and her family left the country with no intention of ever coming back. As she follows the case of Meena–a Hindu woman attacked by members of her own village and her own family for marrying a Muslim man–Smita comes face to face with a society where tradition carries more weight than one’s own heart, and a story that threatens to unearth the painful secrets of Smita’s own past. ~Indiebound

I was immediately pulled into this story. Meena’s story of abuse at the hands of her own brothers, was intense in the telling. Permanently disfigured by fire and ridiculed by the entire village for falling in love and marrying a Muslim man, proved to be too much for her to overcome. As unwelcome as she is, her young daughter, Abra is what keeps her there. Forced to live with a MIL who hates her for what happened to her son, the only thing that grounds her are the ethereal visits of her husband Abdul as he makes his presence known through dreams.

Smita, a journalist, returns to India to assist a colleague who is having hip surgery. Her entire motivation for going is to just help her colleague during recovery. India is not a place she ever wanted to return to. Too many memories of when her family was forced to leave when she was a child. But when she arrives, she finds out that Shannon wants her to pick up Meena’s story. That her time in India will not be spent navigating recovery, but interviewing Meena, the MIL, the brothers that caused her so much pain. This was not in the cards, but how can such a story go untold?

Smita’s time in India is wrought with unpleasant memories, difficult people, and reluctant witnesses. Her only saving grace is the man who Shannon brought in to help navigate the language barrier. Mohan’s kindness, common sense and loyalty to Smita and Shannon prove to be invaluable.

This was an easy story to fall into given the weighty subject matter but the ending! No spoilers but I was not prepared for the ending. It was like a slap to the face! Overall, to say that I “enjoyed” this story would be a real stretch but I found myself taken by the characters and the difficulty presenting itself as Meena’s story is told. It was chosen for my book club and I think there will be plenty to discuss.

Source: Borrowed
Disclosure: This post contains Indiebound affiliate links.

Sunday Matters: All the Reading

Sunday Matters

I can’t even begin to tell you how excited I am to be reading again. You think with surgery recovery you’ll have ALL THE TIME to read but nope. I was nauseous and looking at a page or my Kindle sent the room spinning. SO glad that phase is behind me now. I am having fun lining up all my next reads.

Right Now:

Student ministry this morning, as usual and then a meeting afterward.

This Week:

Nothing much going on this week. I  have to go in for some blood work ahead of  my CT and MRI scans but these special labs need to be scheduled and for whatever reason, my providers insist I can schedule this on my own but history tells me no. They are supposed to call it in and then I go but I will attempt to do what they asked for.

Reading:

I finished, Honor. I will hopefully get that review posted this week. My next read is Census by Jesse Ball. I chose it for book club. Stephen King’s You Like It Darker (stories) comes out May 21st! That will be a good escape read.

Grateful for:

The two days that I can work from home. The three in-office days kind of wipe me out so I need those two remote days to rest up a little in between.

Chatting with friends about books and life…