The Good Girls: An Ordinary Killing

The Good Girls: An Ordinary Killing

by Sonia Faleiro

Narrated by Sonia Faleiro

Unabridged — 7 hours, 38 minutes

The Good Girls: An Ordinary Killing

The Good Girls: An Ordinary Killing

by Sonia Faleiro

Narrated by Sonia Faleiro

Unabridged — 7 hours, 38 minutes

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Overview

By the award-winning writer of Beautiful Thing, a masterly inquest into how the mysterious deaths of two teenage girls shone a light into the darkest corners of a nation.

The girls' names were Padma and Lalli, but they were so inseparable that people in the village called them Padma Lalli. Sixteen-year-old Padma sparked and burned. Fourteen-year-old Lalli was an incorrigible romantic.

They grew up in Katra Sadatganj, an eye-blink of a village in western Uttar Pradesh crammed into less than one square mile of land. It was out in the fields, in the middle of mango season, that the rumors started.

Then one night in the summer of 2014 the girls went missing; and hours later they were found hanging in the orchard. Who they were, and what had happened to them, was already less important than what their disappearance meant to the people left behind.

In the ensuing months, the investigation into their deaths would implode everything that their small community held to be true, and instigate a national conversation about sex and violence. Slipping deftly behind political maneuvering, caste systems and codes of honor in a village in northern India, The Good Girls returns to the scene of Padma and Lalli's short lives and shameful deaths, and dares to ask: what is the human cost of shame?

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

12/14/2020

In this powerful account, Faleiro (Beautiful Thing: Inside the Secret World of Bombay’s Dance Bars) tells the tragic story of two cousins, 16-year-old Padma Shakya and 14-year-old Lalli Shakya, who grew up in a village in the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh. Padma and Lalli, who tended the family’s goats, disappeared one night in 2014. They were found the next morning hanging from a mango tree. Was it rape and murder, or suicide? Months of bungling police, corrupt politicians, lying witnesses, and missing evidence resulted in the arrests of Padma’s boyfriend, his two brothers, and two police officers in a case of a gang rape gone wrong. When officers of the Central Bureau of Investigation, India’s equivalent of the FBI, took over the botched case, they concluded it was suicide, not murder, and the girls took their own lives out of shame after being caught in a field with a boy. In incisive prose, Faleiro, who offers no opinion on what actually happened, examines India’s family honor system and the grueling lives of lower caste women. True crime buffs will be fascinated. Agent: Jin Auh, Wylie Agency. (Feb.)

From the Publisher

Praise for The Good Girls

New York Times Editors’ Choice
Financial Times Best Book of the Week
Marie Claire Best True Crime Book of 2021

Longlisted for the ALCS Gold Dagger for Non Fiction

The Good Girls is transfixing; it has the pacing and mood of a whodunit, but no clear reveal; Faleiro does not indict the cruelty or malice of any individual, nor any particular system. She indicts something even more common, and in its own way far more pernicious: a culture of indifference that allowed for the neglect of the girls in life and in death.” —Parul Sehgal, New York Times

“A riveting—sometimes astonishing—work of forensic journalism that chronicles the girls’ lives as well as the circumstances of their death." —Wall Street Journal

“Powerful . . . Her social analysis is enlightening . . . most poignant when it’s focused on the girls’ unfinished lives.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune

“The story [Faleiro] weaves in exquisite language is as tragic and ugly as it is engrossing . . . A riveting, terrible tale, one all too common, but Faleiro’s gorgeous prose makes it bearable.” —New York Times Book Review

“A haunting piece of narrative reporting . . . Essential reading.”—Sunday Times (UK)

“A beautifully calibrated book, full of suspense to the final pages, urging us to walk into that night and listen.” —Guardian (UK)

"[A] gripping, real-life murder mystery... Taut with dramatic tension, The Good Girls vividly captures the sights, sounds, smells, preoccupations and oppressiveness of the village... [and] effectively captures the circus-like atmosphere that typically follows heinous crimes in India... Faleiro writes sensitively about her subjects’ actions and motivations." —Financial Times

"[A] compulsively readable, highly impressive work of reportage... The Good Girls is excellent, deeply felt nonfiction." —Shelf Awareness

“A modern-day Rashomon that offers multiple views of the widely publicized deaths of two young women in rural India…A gripping story.” —Kirkus Reviews

“Powerful account… In incisive prose, Faleiro…examines India’s family honor system and the grueling lives of lower caste women. True crime buffs will be fascinated.” —Publishers Weekly

“In this true story of the mysterious death of two girls, Sonia Faleiro confronts us with what it means to be young, poor, powerless and most importantly, female, in much of today's India. Despite its calm, measured tone, or more likely, because of it, The Good Girls left me shattered.” —Abhijit Banerjee, Nobel Prize winner

The Good Girls is an insightful work of reportage that highlights how gender intersects with class and caste in Indian society. It’s a page-turner, a feminist text, and an essential read that is deeply empathetic toward its two main subjects who no longer have a voice.” —Deepa Anappara

"An extraordinary book studded with insights into media, justice, corruption, and the rules governing women's lives. Padma and Lalli—harvesting mint, enchanted by a play, seeking freedom, wishing to be something—will stay powerfully with me." —Megha Majumdar

“Chilling and devastating, The Good Girls is narrative reportage at its very best” —Fatima Bhutto

“A compulsively readable whodunit, as fast-moving as a mystery novel, and at a whole deeper level offers profound observations about caste and sexuality in rural India.” —Barbara Demick

Praise for Beautiful Thing

Sunday Times Travel Book of the Year
Time Out Subcontinental Book of the Year
Best Book of the Year by Economist, NPR, Guardian, San Francisco Chronicle, Kirkus, CNN Mumbai, and Observer

“With a few strokes, Faleiro conjures a world. ”—Dwight Garner, The New York Times

"A knockout. Unsparing, unsentimental and wickedly funny." —Parul Sehgal, NPR

"Gritty, gripping and often heartbreaking—an impressive piece of narrative non-fiction." —Kirkus (starred review)

“A tour de force of reportage, whose depth, insight and resonance make it the equal of the best fiction.” —Sunday Times

"Excellent, painstaking and often painful." — San Francisco Chronicle

“Faleiro brings a novelist’s eye for detail and a depth of empathy to her work. A magnificent book of reportage that is also endowed with all the terror and beauty of art.” —Kiran Desai

“Does what every good piece of reportage ought to: took me to a place I couldn't have gone by myself.” —Hari Kunzru

"A small masterpiece of observation." —William Dalrymple

"A tour de force of heartrending reportage." —Independent

"It is useless to describe the pathos and singular power of this book." —Spectator

"So compelling that it invites from us the question of exactly what might constitute genius in non-fiction." —The National

"Brilliant." —Guardian

"A moving testament." —Literary Review

"Astonishing, gripping, immersive." —Time Out

"Excellent." —Telegraph UK

Library Journal

02/01/2021

Faleiro (Beautiful Thing) tells the story of the infamous deaths of two girls in Katra, Uttar Pradesh, India, in 2014. The teenage girls vanished one night and were found hanging from a tree the next morning. The case gained international media and social media attention, especially after the medical examiner reported evidence of rape. Part true-crime tale, part social commentary, Faleiro's account guides readers through the evidence and potential explanations for the girls' deaths as investigators uncover new evidence. In the first part of the book, Faleiro introduces the key players while reflecting on the effects of poverty on the rural community in Katra and the political climate in India. Later, Faleiro uses the ongoing investigation to reflect on the status of women in India, particularly surrounding issues of rape, caste, and the community's rigid code of honor. She explains the history of Uttar Pradesh, including occasional independent movements, in order to provide more context about the region and its close ties to Nepal, while also shedding insight into how others in India view the province. VERDICT An interesting look into women's lives in India. Recommended for readers interested in women's issues.—Rebekah Kati, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

Kirkus Reviews

2020-12-15
A modern-day Rashomon that offers multiple views of the widely publicized deaths of two young women in rural India.

In the summer of 2014, two teenagers, whom Faleiro calls Padma and Lalli, left their homes in the countryside of Uttar Pradesh, walking to a nearby orchard. Not long after, they were found hanging from a tree. An autopsy was inconclusive, but it seemed likely that the girls had been raped. Consequently, the village was swept up in a vortex of contending views on religion, caste, gender roles, women’s rights, and other thorny issues, all cogently explored by the author. The principal suspects were members of a low caste. “Their lives had been dismantled,” writes Faleiro, a sympathetic yet unrelenting investigator. “And not one politician, they said, not even one of their own, had come to see them, never mind offer them assistance of any sort….This is what it meant to be poor.” Other issues were at play, including the fact that the girls had dared use their cellphones in public—an act that proved, according to a society where women are untrustworthy, that they were seeking dangerous liaisons. As Faleiro carefully documents, the disappearance of the girls was not extraordinary: “In the year that Padma and Lalli went missing, 12,361 people were kidnapped and abducted in Uttar Pradesh, accounting for 16 per cent of all such crimes in India.” In a recent case, a wealthy businessman had murdered at least 17 people, some of them children, whose disappearances the police had not paid attention to precisely because they were poor. Padma’s and Lalli’s graves suffered a final indignity during a devastating flood, and while their case seems to resist definitive resolution, it shows that, “for the poor, who have always suffered the most, India hasn’t changed all that much.”

A gripping story that brings home the point that India may be “the worst place in the world to be a woman.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940177830803
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 02/09/2021
Edition description: Unabridged
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