3.5 

The Story Hour

By Thrity Umrigar
The Story Hour by Thrity Umrigar digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

“Thrity Umrigar has an uncanny ability to look deeply into the human heart and find the absolute truth of our lives. The Story Hour is stunning and beautiful. Lakshmi and Maggie will stay with readers for a very long time.” — Luis Alberto Urrea, author of The Hummingbird's Daughter

From the critically beloved, bestselling author of The World We Found and The Space Between Us, whom the New York Times Book Review calls a “perceptive and... piercing writer,” comes a profound, heartbreakingly honest novel about friendship, family, secrets, forgiveness, and second chances.

An experienced psychologist, Maggie carefully maintains emotional distance from her patients. But when she meets a young Indian woman who tried to kill herself, her professional detachment disintegrates. Cut off from her family in India, Lakshmi is desperately lonely and trapped in a loveless marriage to a domineering man who limits her world to their small restaurant and grocery store.

Moved by her plight, Maggie treats Lakshmi in her home office for free, quickly realizing that the despondent woman doesn’t need a shrink; she needs a friend. Determined to empower Lakshmi as a woman who feels valued in her own right, Maggie abandons protocol, and soon doctor and patient have become close friends.

But while their relationship is deeply affectionate, it is also warped by conflicting expectations. When Maggie and Lakshmi open up and share long-buried secrets, the revelations will jeopardize their close bond, shake their faith in each other, and force them to confront painful choices.

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The Story Hour Reviews

3.5
“the story hour was such an interesting read to me. i managed to get through it incredibly quickly as not only was it a very short book, but the pacing was fast and well done and i read it in a few sittings. as i've said before, i love a dual POV book so much for this very reason, i think it immediately makes a book much easier to get through, even if you don't feel connected to all the characters. so, on a similar note, i can say i didn't exactly feel very connected to both the women in this story. i loved lakshmi a lot!! she was so endearing and sweet and represented everything i know the many indian women in my life to be; intelligent, loving and incredibly hospitable people. her story honestly reminded me a bit of the bollywood movie "english vinglish" in some aspects - a woman who is undermined by her husband and seeks companionship and solace in a stranger. i really enjoyed seeing her growth throughout the book and being inside her head rather than having her chapters in a third person narrative made it all the more interesting and also made it easier to resonate with her. on the other hand, i didn't like maggie at all. her attitude towards lakshmi made me deeply uncomfortable, and all of the notes i made as i was reading the book reflected that feeling. regardless of her past, her actions were entirely unforgivable and there were moments where i feared they were going to be completely overlooked. i still found her storyline interesting, but i would've been entirely happy to read this book without her point of view being included at all. in addition to this, i felt that the book ended a little abruptly. the build up to the end was a lot more dramatic than the end itself. however, the rest of the book was throughly enjoyable and i am glad i read it, though i think there's a very stark difference between this book and thrity umrigar's newer work, which i think i prefer (like honor and the museum of failures).”
“There is a strange power that words hold, as stories we tell of the lives we live or the hearts we love. Words that connect souls trapped in bodies poles apart, words that break and make you, words that kill or become the reason you live. This was my first book from Thrity Umrigar and I cannot wait to read more. Absolutely touching!”

About Thrity Umrigar

Thrity Umrigar is the author of seven novels Everybody’s Son, The Story Hour, The World We Found, The Weight of Heaven, The Space Between Us, If Today Be Sweet, and Bombay Time; a memoir, First Darling of the Morning; and a children’s picture book, When I Carried You in My Belly. A former journalist, she was awarded a Nieman Fellowship to Harvard and was a finalist for the PEN Beyond Margins Award. A professor of English at Case Western Reserve University, she lives in Cleveland, Ohio.

 

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