Reviews for a Goan Holiday

KIRKUS REVIEW
https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/anitha-perinchery/a-goan-holiday/

The reappearance of an old boyfriend complicates the failed marriage of two physicians—and raises many ghosts from the past—in this romantic mystery.

For the first time in 11 years, Dr. Anjali Joshi finds herself back in Vagator in the coastal Indian state of Goa, where the famous beaches bring tourists from all over the world. She is here to check on her family’s medical clinic, which has been attracting some rumors of criminality. While she’s in town, Anjali goes on a blind date at the behest of a meddling cousin only to arrive at the restaurant and see Dr. Joe D’Acosta sitting at the table. Joe is Anjali’s medical school boyfriend who disappeared from her life without a word 11 years ago—her last trip to Goa was to search for him only to hear that he didn’t want to be found. Enraged at the sight of him, she storms off. Anjali is recently divorced from Dr. Rishabh “Rishi” Rastogi, Joe’s old medical school roommate. Rishi used Anjali’s family’s political clout to protect himself from a blackmailer, but now that he is single again, the letters have begun to reappear, threatening to out him for a crime he committed many years ago. The return of the blackmailer causes Rishi to quit his job and rush to Goa to try to convince Anjali to forgive his past indiscretions and take him back. Meanwhile, Joe feels just as shaken by the blind date as Anjali and wonders what she knows about his disappearance: “The most important question of all was one Joe didn’t dare ask: was there a chance she knew the real reason why he left Delhi, the terrible truth of what he’d done?” As both men attempt to win back Anjali while escaping the mistakes of their youth, she, too, seeks emancipation from the past—at least, the past as she understands it. The narrative leaps back and forth between two timelines: the present in Goa and the past when the three protagonists were still in medical school. Perinchery’s prose is smooth and fluid, and it succeeds in capturing the muddled emotional states of her characters: “An Ambassador car waited at the entrance of the jetty. Joe hesitated only a second or two before stumbling into the backseat. If he tried to run, he wasn’t gonna get far, and what the agent said about the criminals going after Joe’s loved ones… he watched the streets fly past, not really seeing any of it.” While there are some high-stakes happenings and big reveals, the book is essentially a three-part character study (with some supporting personalities as well). It feels long at over 500 pages—a slimmer novel would have more momentum—but the world and the characters are generally compelling. In addition to universal themes of love and betrayal, the author explores some particular South Asian concerns relating to marriage, gender roles, and familial expectations. The ending is perhaps a bit too neat, but those who have gotten that far are likely onboard with Perinchery’s tidy brand of storytelling.

An engaging tale about a love triangle featuring doctors set in beautiful Goa.

MIDWEST BOOK REVIEW (D. Donovan, Senior Reviewer)

A Goan Holiday provides another amorous romp across India by Anitha Perinchery, who brings the culture, politics, and social caste system of her Indian heritage to life as nicely as was done in the previously-reviewed thriller One Monsoon in Mumbai.

This story takes a different turn. It’s a medical thriller that involves spunky heroine Anjali in a series of complicated encounters with two exes, a clinic which could be a front for illegal operations, and a vindictive neighbor who keeps trying to drive her out of town, and who holds the power to affect her brother’s position.

As other characters such as Dr. Joe face their own strange encounters, including meetings with family members in the afterlife, A Goan Holiday ramps up to include romance and intrigue combined with ironic encounters and reconnections: “This can’t be happening, her mind screamed, wildly. In her dreams, they’d met again a thousand times. Each time, she’d been a diva, unleashing royal fury on him for ripping her heart apart and trampling on the pieces. Each time, the agony of loss overwhelmed her pride and anger, and she cried loud, ugly sobs which left her humiliated even in her imagination. She was finally–finally–trying to put the painful chapter behind her, and she ran into him exactly when she bore a close resemblance to a drowned rat.”

American readers think ‘medical thriller’ and associate it with the in-clinic intrigue crafted by writers such as Robin Cook, but Anitha Perinchery excels in a culturally-based, powerful examination not just of illicit, illegal activities in the Indian medical community, but the impacts of class, caste, romance, and cultural changes in a small Goan town.

Her story thus moves beyond the clinic’s walls and into the milieu of Indian society. It offers a surprise in the return of Seema, the protagonist in One Monsoon in Mumbai, as well as other characters who here are presented from quite a different perspective as Anjali struggles with conflict, contemplates suicide, and uncovers her own brand of investigative intrigue.

Just as in One Monsoon in Mumbai, a spunky, progressive, determined, yet very human female protagonist drives the story line, creating a read that is compellingly difficult to put down.

GOODREADS REVIEWS
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/49357083-a-goan-holiday

AMAZON REVIEWS
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1733798641/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i1#customerReviews

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