[personal profile] tamaranth
The Mistress of Spices -- Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni
Pebble-hard fenugreek lies tight and closed in the centre of your palm, colour of sand at the bottom of an old creek. But put it in water and it will bloom free.
Bite the swollen kernels between your teeth and taste its bitter sweetness. Taste of waterweeds in a wild place, the cry of grey geese. Fenugreek Tuesday's spice, when the air is green like mosses after rain. Spice for days when I want to huddle into a quilt stitched with peepul leaves and tell stories like on the island. Except here who would I tell them to. (p. 47)


Tilo runs a spice shop in Oakland, California: outwardly she seems an elderly Indian lady, but in fact she is a Mistress of Spices, able to work magic with the spices she stocks. While she's advising her customers on how to make a really good biriyani, she also provides subtle, often unrequested help with less tangible problems: love, loss, rejection, the heart's desire. One day a lonely American whose name she doesn't know enters the store, and Tilo finds herself prey to the feelings -- and the sense of self -- that she's been forced to set aside by her vocation. Such a shift is dangerous. The spices whispering to Tilo, the spices of whom she seems more servant than mistress, will have their revenge: Tilo will be cleansed anew in Shambati's fire, whether she wills it or not.

Each chapter is titled after a different spice, and the trail of those spices -- ginger, fenugreek, red chili, lotus -- follows the shape of the story. Divakaruni's prose is sensual, full of images that speak of somewhere other than the grimy dangerous streets of Oakland, and seems to me to have the rhythm of a solitary woman's stream-of-consciousness muttering. (Tilo's questions to herself, as in the quotation at the head of this review, never have question marks. There is nobody to answer.)

If this were simply a romance, the story of Tilo getting to know the lonely American ("so you think I'm white"), it would be a novel to read and reflect upon. There is more to it, though: the troubles of Tilo's customers are bound up in the expatriate Indian experience in California ("all who have suffered from America"), racist attacks and arranged marriages and the disjunction between women's roles -- and metrics of success -- in Western society and within the family. The characters are not mere stereotypes, though each of them embodies a different aspect of the India-in-America experience. And though the lonely American is not (by definition) Indian, he too has something to teach Tilo, if only that "perhaps we can see each another better than we can ourselves".

Or perhaps it is that Tilo's greatest weakness is her pride: perhaps her lesson is humility.

A beautiful book: again, one I've owned for years and somehow not read until now, and one that I wonder if I'd have appreciated as much when I first acquired it as I do now.

Date: Tuesday, June 8th, 2010 02:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lamentables.livejournal.com
I remember discovering this book; I loved it.
I like her others, but none of them quite measure up to this one.

Date: Tuesday, June 8th, 2010 04:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tamaranth.livejournal.com
according to this scrap of paper that fell out, my copy originated in Waterstones, Leamington Spa, on 4.10.99 ... <g> So, belated thanks for the recommendation! I'll keep an eye out for her others.

Date: Wednesday, June 9th, 2010 08:50 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lamentables.livejournal.com
Predictable, moi?

Date: Tuesday, June 8th, 2010 04:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tamaranth.livejournal.com
... have you seen the film? Is it worth watching?

Date: Wednesday, June 9th, 2010 08:51 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] lamentables.livejournal.com
No, I haven't. I'm very wary of film adaptations of beloved books.

Date: Tuesday, June 8th, 2010 03:52 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] perlmonger.livejournal.com
I was sold on this with that quotation, never mind after your review. And I'm going to have to go out, damnit; Humberside Libraries have six copies, and for unknown reasons they're all currently on shelves South of the river (and as such unreservable in their mind-bogglingly crap online system).

Date: Tuesday, June 8th, 2010 04:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tamaranth.livejournal.com
eee! I am always glad to be a good influence, though in this case the Source of Goodness is [livejournal.com profile] lamentables, just up the page from you ...

Am sorry to hear you have a crap online library system. Cambridge's is pretty damned impressive and lets me reserve books county-wide online, and pick 'em up at the very-very-local branch. Which I can walk to even (a) in a torrential rainstorm (b) when the post-viral nonsense kicks in.

Hmm, Amazon have it for a penny ...

Date: Tuesday, June 8th, 2010 04:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] perlmonger.livejournal.com
Your reviews are generally a very bad influence indeed, given the size of my to-read heap already; please don't stop writing them :)

We're trying very hard not to buy more books (part of moving from a 3-bed house with garage and shed to 2-bed house with neither), so I'll likely drop into our local library, which if not as close as yours is still pretty nearby.

Date: Tuesday, June 8th, 2010 05:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tamaranth.livejournal.com
you could -- gasp! -- get rid of a book each time you acquire one. Which is working sort-of-well for me. Because I can't count.

Don't worry, reviews will keep coming, especially at the moment when doing much else knocks me out!

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