India, 1995. Charlotte Bridgwater lives with her father, a former British general, and just one loyal servant in a stately old mansion in the town of Rampur. Money is scarce and the once grand estate is crumbling.
In a desperate bid to generate income, Charlotte rents a room to Madan, an Indian tailor with an astonishing talent for making beautiful garments. Madan is unable to communicate verbally, but the two have an immediate and electrifying connection. And, as the extreme heat before the impending monsoon paralyzes the residents of Rampur, the details of their lives unfold: Charlotte's unhappy childhood and the early death of her husband, Madan's poverty-stricken life on the streets, and how and when their paths have crossed before.
Told in rich, rhapsodic prose, spanning decades and across continents, Waiting for the Monsoon is an unforgettable tale of love, loss, and the unwavering bond between two people.
Waiting for the Monsoon will take you on an emotional roller-coaster. It’s definitely one I’d recommend for summer book clubs. Like a carefully cooked Indian feast, it’s too good to not share.
Waiting for the Monsoon is a lovely literary banquet upon which to feast, something to savour.
You know the charged feeling that hangs in the air before a storm? That's the romantic electricity that pulses through Threes Anna's Waiting for the Monsoon.
Forgotten ties stretching back years bind the headstrong daughter of a wealthy British military man and a mute itinerant Indian tailor in this tale told in flashbacks and touched by magical realism.
Described by one Dutch reviewer as Slumdog Millionaire meets Jane Eyre, this novel may require more than one hankie at the ready.
... a vividly painted, widescreen look at the ebb and flow of life in Rampur, India.