Publishers Weekly
Nair's accomplished debut is a familial drama spanning multiple decades. Rakhee Singh has spent years avoiding memories of the transformative summer when she turned 11, but her betrothal forces her to realize she needs to acknowledge her past before she can move forward. "Keeping secrets had become second nature, an inheritance passed down from mother to daughter like an heirloom." As a young child in Minnesota, Rakhee senses her mother's unhappiness, and this feeling intensifies after a batch of mysterious letters arrives from India. Her mother's moods become unpredictable, culminating in the decision to visit her family in rural Kerala with Rakhee, leaving her husband behind. In India, Rakhee longs to explore the jungle surrounding the family's home, but is warned about a superstition prohibiting children from entering it. Rakhee disobeys and what she discovers there is a tangled web of deceit that will haunt her for years. Nair creates a satisfying coming-of-age tale with smooth prose and a lustrous backdrop. (June)
From the Publisher
"A daring fairy tale of a story, Nair's first novel audaciously tackles issues ranging from puberty to friendship to abuse, providing plenty of adventure as well." Booklist
"Lush and mysterious, The Girl in the Garden casts its spell from the first page. Kamala Nair weaves an intricate tale of family bonds, buried secrets, and the pain that comes when we must leave the innocence of childhood behind. This is a deeply satisfying novel." Kelly O'Conner McNees, author of The Lost Summer of Louisa May Alcott
"Kamala Nair has crafted an evocative, passionate, tragic novel about love, loss and the terrible cost of family secrets. An impressive debut." Thrity Umrigar, bestselling author of The Space Between Us
Library Journal - Audio
Debut author Nair has written a powerfully compelling coming-of-age story in which ten-year-old Rakhee discovers the family skeletons during a summer in India with her mother and her mother's relatives. With a realistic yet easily understood Indian accent, actress Anitha Gandhi (Law & Order: Criminal Intent) conveys in a calm, quiet, evocative reading the confusion of a child in a strange country with different mores and expectations, living with an unstable parent. Released simultaneously with the print volume, this audiobook holds the listener's attention and will appeal to fans of family drama, Indian fiction, and Frances Hodgson Burnett's Secret Garden. The CD edition includes a bonus PDF of the Varma family tree and an author interview. ["The unexpected twists and dark secrets lurking make it difficult for readers to put this engrossing story down," read the review of the Grand Central hc, LJ 6/1/11.—Ed.]—Laurie Selwyn, formerly with Grayson Cty. Law Lib., Sherman, TX
Library Journal
On the eve of her marriage, Rakhee Singh recalls being taken to her mother's ancestral home in India as a ten-year-old and discovering that family secrets lay buried in the lush jungle behind the house. Pitched as a cross between Frances Hodgson Burnett's classic The Secret Garden and Jhumpa Lahiri's The Namesake, this debut could do well with reading groups. Watch.
SEPTEMBER 2011 - AudioFile
Anitha Gandhi has a lovely voice and the perfect accent for this story of family secrets uncovered during an American girl’s summer visit with her mother’s family in India. There’s a fairy-tale quality to Rakhee’s adventures when she disobeys her aunties and ventures at dawn into the jungle behind the family house. Nair’s story is winning, an updated SECRET GARDEN. But in Gandhi's garden a hospital is always a “hospill” and “couldn’t have” is always “coun’v,” and her syllable-swallowing haste has nothing to do with narrative pace. Nor does she interpret sentences with great attention to sense. Surely clearer direction from the producers could have helped. What’s here is unfair to the author, and perhaps to the narrator as well. B.G. © AudioFile 2011, Portland, Maine