A New Mantra

· The Sood Family Book 1 · Tule Publishing
3.0
1 review
Ebook
215
Pages
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About this ebook

She’s always done what was expected of her. Until…


When 30-year-old Seattle-based Indian housewife Mira Sood is blindsided by her husband’s extramarital affair, her three-year arranged marriage is shattered. Humiliated, heartbroken, near-broke, and facing the united dissension of her orthodox family, Mira is desperate to rebuild her life. She moves in with her rebel cousin, searches for any job that will take her, and impulsively signs up for a half-marathon race. There’s just one problem—Mira's experience with running starts and ends with running to catch the bus.


With herself as her biggest critic and doubter, Mira commits to the race and is assisted by entrepreneur Andy Fitzgerald, a handsome, elite marathoner who helps her create a training schedule and personal goals. When the lines of friendship begin to blur, Mira realizes she’s facing an even bigger challenge.


Can Mira embrace her stronger, more independent self—risking another heartbreak and disappointing her family—or will she once again play it too safe and let the possibility of happiness slip away?

Ratings and reviews

3.0
1 review
Alison Robinson
April 21, 2022
Mira Sood has always been a dutiful Indian daughter, including agreeing to an arranged marriage and moving to the US with her new husband, Jay. Now three years later, Jay announces he wants a divorce, he's met someone else. No friends, no job, no money, no home, Mira is forced to move in with her rebellious cousin Laila and suffer the collective guilt trips of her mother and aunt - both of whom think she should move heaven and earth to get Jay to come back. In a fit of madness Mira signs up to do a half-marathon, despite never having run a day in her life, and strikes up a friendship with Andy Fitzgerald, a seasoned runner who helps her train. Slowly Mira's life starts to come together, but is she willing to defy her family to achieve her own happiness? I am always looking to broaden my reading so when I saw this book I thought this would be interesting, a novel about an Indian woman living in the US, written by an Indian woman living in the US. Unfortunately, I didn't really engage with the characters, maybe because it was written in the third person so it all felt a bit remote? Also, it all felt a bit repetitive, description of Mira's running three times a week, descriptions of the food Mira cooks, descriptions of Mira's guilt-laden conversations with her family, rinse-and-repeat. To me this sounded like the author had herself learned to run and was a bit evangelical about the process, wanting to share every milestone with the reader. Overall, pleasant enough but I won't be requesting the second book. I received a free copy of the book from the publisher Tule in return for an honest review.
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