A Quiet Dissonance
by Poornima Manco
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Pub Date Mar 30 2021 | Archive Date May 01 2021
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Description
Home. Is it a place or a feeling? When Anu and her family move to a small village in the English countryside, she is desperate to put down roots in her new community.
To her dismay, not everyone is welcoming. Is it her? Must she change to fit in? In her quest for answers, she sets out to peel back the layers of her life, examining all that has made her who she is.
Truth, she finds, is often uncomfortable and unpalatable. And rarely provides answers. At a crossroads, Anu needs to determine which is the right path for her — acceptance from within or without?
Available Editions
ISBN | 9781916269996 |
PRICE | $2.99 (USD) |
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Featured Reviews
“A Quiet Dissonance” follows the story of Anu and her family as they straddle two worlds. Originally from India, Anu and her husband, Ravi, move to a small town in England. Anu desperately tries to fit in with the other school mums, while still retaining her culture and identity as an artist. There were many ups and downs throughout this novel (I don’t want to give anything away!), some unique to an immigrant’s experience, while others were relatable to all circumstances. Anu faces friction from family members, friends; seeks acceptance from those around her; and deals with loss of self, culture, and family. Manco’s writing is superb and draws the reader right in. We feel Anu’s confusion and her agony as she navigates the social circles of school mums, dance mums, and neighbors.
I truly enjoyed reading this novel. It flowed beautifully, and while there were a lot of characters, they were fairly easy to remember. So many parts of this book hit home to me, having relocated a few times in my life, trying hard to make new friends, navigating a new culture. Manco nailed human nature in this book—sometimes it was painful how true she wrote her characters. There’s so much heart and depth to this one. I find myself still processing it and all of the layers that were subtly put in.
This novel is an important one for our times especially. As a woman, it’s hard to choose “what’s good and right for me-my family, my work” and to find “a deeper happiness…that cannot be corrupted from the outside”. There’s so much pressure to be all put together, to have kids who are well rounded, and the list goes on. Manco demonstrates throughout her novel what is important to Anu and causes the reader to reflect on their own priorities and if they are in the right order.
I loved the cover, the writing, and the characters! I loved Noni and Cathy. There were a few bits in the middle with the school mums that I felt could have been shortened, but other than that, the pacing was great. A couple times Neha’s name was substituted for Anu’s.
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for providing me with an ARC.
I try and read books by authors from a similar background as myself as I feel there is a massive gap in the market for this. This book is written by a brown woman about a brown woman who is the same age as me but this lady (Anu) has a husband and a child.
The book focuses on Anu and her life in England, where she tries to balance fitting in with the mums at the school where her daughter Neha goes, her mum, her overbearing cousin and her relationship with her husband.
I really liked this book, it is split into three parts and follows Anu going through her day to day life, coping with a mother who was always distant, a daughter in primary school and having to negotiate her friendship groups.
I have been reading a lot of thrillers recently and kept expecting a twist but once I got it into my head that this book would not have a twist, it was a very enjoyable read.
The characters are well written, I like the additions of Punjabi/Hindi works in the book and how it welded the western aspect of life with the eastern aspect of life that brown people have to weld together.
I also liked how Anu questioned herself on certain things that the women at school did, wondering if she had missed things because she was not familiar with this culture or because the women were just being bitches. We have all been in places where we are made to feel as if we are not good enough for certain things and these encounters have left us wondering what is wrong with us.
At times, I found myself not liking Anu's husband but as the story progressed, I could see why he was behaving the way he was.
This book resonates with me a lot in certain parts. I did find one mistake in it, though...at the end of one of the chapters, I believe it is Chapter 14 (the last chapter in Part 2), the author confuses Anu and Neha and the text states that Neha was doing X when it should say that Anu was doing X.
My second minor complaint about it is the incorrect usage of places. I feel that if you are using an actual place then you should get the geography correct, as otherwise, you could just make it up. The author refers to Southall but also calls a road "King's Street" when it is actually "King Street".
I would definitely recommend this book, I enjoyed reading it.
I don't have kids and this book made me realise that it's probably a good thing that I don't. That's not to say I have anything against little people but I don't think I could have handled the 'mean girls' at the school gates. This is a very modern tale of ghosting and gaslighting amongst the mumocracy. It's horrible to see that bullying and ganging up doesn't stop when the girls leave school.
Anu and Ravi have moved from India to a village not too far from London and Anu struggles to fit in. She observes - and it struck me quite deeply - that somebody moving to England from India today has very little in common with those who moved here back in the 50s, 60s, or even later. The India that she and Ravi left behind is a completely different country from the one left behind by earlier waves of immigration. She doesn't fit in with the historic immigrant community and the mums at the school are a mercurial bunch, changing their favour and fashion frequently. At first, she has no friends, then a group pick her up and include her, only to drop her again without explanation.
I didn't have problems fitting in at school - and I probably wasn't the type of kid to care too much - but as a mum, Anu really suffers for being pushed aside and left out. Ravi has his work colleagues and doesn't really 'get' why she's so upset. She also has a problem that her mother was a pretty dreadful woman who gave her no attention and very little love. It's not really as if she has any kind of role model.
I really enjoyed this book even though very little actually happened. I sympathised deeply with Anu and her loneliness and was happy when she found another way by which to define her worth. I don't know how much of this was autobiographical, but if Poornima Manco suffered this kind of unkindness, I hope she's found her worth and no longer needs to define herself by the opinion of others. And if I were a mum and she were her character, she'd be welcome round at my house for coffee and a chat any time.
Thanks to Netgalley and the publishers for access to this lovely book.
The topics of this book are contemporary and important, racism, minority, different cultures, acceptance, and belonging.
The author tries to develop these topics through Anu and her family, husband Ravi, and daughter Neha. Since they live for the longest time in England where they are still considered too Indian, they do not count as really Indian anymore in India as they are too westernized. Anu, being an artist, feels this non-belonging more than others and struggles. So far so good, but the characters fall short; Anu is too contradictory and gets annoying, her husband Ravi is lacking any depth, and the English school mothers are very cliche. It was a promising book which for me did not fully deliver.
Having read Poornima Manco's novella The Intimacy of Loss and short stories; Parvathy's Well and Damage, I was really pleased to read her debut novel, A Quiet Dissonance.
I found the story to be very real. After Anu and her family move to a village, her daughter Neha starts primary school. Anu enters the world of playground politics and Mummy clubs - which Manco depicts perfectly. Being the only woman of colour and being from a different cultural background, Anu is riddled with personal insecurites. She hates being the outsider and longs to be accepted.
Anu aims to please and along the way, she loses her true self. This book takes us on a seven year journey in which Anu has highs and lows. Her husband Ravi and neighbour Susan both prove to be the voice of reason. The slight downside I found was that there was no explanation as to why the whole Jemima/Julie club suddenly distance themselves from Anu.
Moving from India to a quiet English village means a struggle for Anu to fit in with the other mothers and women at her child's school. Her struggle for acceptance and also for her own self truths make this an excellent read.