November 12, 2020
The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey
#throwbackthursday
Genre/Categories: Historical Fiction, Mystery, Detective, Bombay, Women’s Rights
This year as part of Blog Audit Challenge 2020 I’m going back to update older review posts. On Thursdays, I’ll be re-sharing a few of these great reads, and today I’m thrilled to share my review of The Widows of Malabar Hill by Sujata Massey…a mystery inspired by the first female lawyer in India.
I’m linking up today with Davida @ The Chocolate Lady’s Book Review Blog for #throwbackthursday.
*This post contains Amazon affiliate links
My Summary:
Perveen Mistry and a challenging case…
“In this culturally rich, mystery set in 1920s Bombay, India, Preveen Mistry, the daughter of a respected family, joins her father’s law firm, becoming one of the first female lawyers in India. Educated at Oxford, Perveen has a tragic personal history that causes her to be extra vigilant on her new case so that the widows of Malabar Hill are treated fairly after the death of their husband. As she examines the paperwork, she discovers that the widows who are living in purdah (strict seclusion) have signed over their inheritance to a charity, raising suspicions that they’re being taken advantage of by their guardian. Tensions build and a murder occurs. Because the widows feel uncomfortable speaking with male investigators, Perveen takes responsibility and great personal risk to determine what really happened on Malabar Hill. Throughout the story, readers are also filled in on Perveen’s back story as readers are introduced to her family and friends and learn about her education.”
Continue here for my full review of The Widows of Malabar Hill ….
QOTD:
Have you read TheWidows of Malabar Hill or is it on your TBR?
This sounds interesting! I have never heard of this book, thank you for resharing it with your #tbt 🙌🏻
She has a second book out following the same character but I haven’t read it.
I saw that it was part of a series
Whoops I commented in the original post, love the audit idea!
Comments appreciated anywhere! 🙌😍 By the way…when I click on your name to visit your site, it gives me a message that the website is deleted.
I love learning about India! This one sounds so interesting.
It was fascinating Kym!
Sounds intriguing- 1920’s India. thanks again Carol.
It was culturally interesting! My fav part is the father/daughter relationship!
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