January has been a big month for Murder Is Everywhere
writers. After cheering for the long anticipated launch of Jeff Siger’s An Aegean April, Anna Maria Alfieri and
I had the crazy good luck to share the same pub date, Jan 9, for our new
historical mysteries. On Pub Day, the two of us found ourselves not in a pub but
with elbows on the same table at Mysterious Bookshop in New York. It turns out
that we have both written mysteries set in the World War I era about dangerous
and degrading customs women living in the British Empire. No, it’s not the same
book. I have a signed copy of Anna Maria’s fine book, The Blasphemers, that I mailed home.
I’ve got no room to carry books because I’m on a book tour.
And what a tour it is: starting off in the golden warmth of Scottsdale Arizona,
zipping up and down the Atlantic Seaboard with its rain and snow, steering
south to Virginia and North Carolina, and treading on thin ice in snowy
Minnesota and Wisconsin.
January is a tricky month to tour in the US; but it’s high
season in India, the setting of my book.
Here’s my spiel: The
Widows of Malabar Hill is the first novel in a new legal mystery series. In
1921 Bombay, a young solicitor named Perveen Mistry works under the supervision
of her father, Jamshedji Mistry, at his small but reputable law firm. Perveen
is the first woman lawyer in Bombay, and many clients are wary of her abilities.
She’s eager to prove herself and get beyond the numbing routine of handling
contracts and wills.
Looks like Mumbai but it's Scottsdale, AZ, near Poisoned Pen Bookstore |
First book signed on the tour at Poisoned Pen |
An opportunity presents itself when a man sends a letter to
Mistry Law asking for assistance in helping three widows donate all their
inheritances to a family trust. The widows live in purdah in a communal household
that was once headed by their husband, Omar Farid, who has passed away. This
leaves the widows unable to go out into the world to talk with bankers or
anyone else. When Perveen goes to call on the Farid widows, trouble ensues, and
she becomes embroiled in a murder investigation. Should she protect the
widows—or is doing so leaving a dangerous criminal unfettered?
Signing in Chicago with Soho author Samira Ahmed, left |
Fun sign at Subtext Books in St. Paul |
This novel is inspired by India’s first two women lawyers,
Cornelia Sorabji and Mithan Tata Lam. In the 1890s through the 1920s, respectively,
these pioneers specialized in serving women and children whose voices had gone
unheard. Cornelia Sorabji is well known enough to finally have a bronze bust statue
in London’s legal powerplace, Lincoln’s Inn. Its fitting as this is where she
was admitted to the London Bar after her years working as a solicitor in
British and princely India. Mithan Tata Lam is not as famous as Cornelia, but
she was the first woman admitted to an Indian bar association (the Bombay Bar) and was instrumental in
revising the Parsi Marriage and Divorce Act in the 1930s.
Winter lake scape in Milwaukee. I signed at Lynden Sculpture Garden |
The laws that kept women down are a major force in my novel—a force that Perveen Mistry has to reckon with when seeking to protect the women’s interests. This part of the book is only too real. Indian family law was established by the British government and senior men in the Muslim, Hindu and Parsi communities. Each faith group had a separate legal code that outlined rules such as the allowable age for marriage, what percentage various family members were allowed to inherit from an estate, and whether divorce was allowed.
Winter wonderland in Minneapolis |
We were all dressed for a snowstorm at Once Upon a Crime in Minneapolis |
The other big element in Perveen’s story is the city of Bombay (now renamed Mumbai). It’s a setting I’ve visited several times and truly adore. The book has scenes all over the city, in places ranging from the title’s Malabar Hill (a lovely hillside neighborhood for the rich) to Fort, the original British settlement in the center of town, which includes Elphinstone College, the Sassoon Library, and Bruce Street, which houses the family law firm and Yazdani’s, a delightful Irani café that actually does exist. There’s even a jaunt to Bandra Beach, a popular spot for lovers now…and back in Perveen’s day.
Today I may be in Connecticut, where the sky is gray and
snow is supposed to fall. So what else is new on this tour? I'll find a way to get to the Wilton Library.
But Bombay’s on my mind.
Phil Schwartzberg, who drew the beautiful maps of Bombay in my book, shows the antique inspiration of an old map he used.
Sujata speaks about
The Widows of Malabar Hill at the Wilton Library in Connecticut at 7 p.m. Jan
17; McIntyre’s Books in Fearrington Village, North Carolina, Jan 20 at 2 p.m.;
Politics and Prose in Washington DC Jan 27 at 3:30 p.m.; and at Bookshop West
Portal in San Francisco on Jan 30 at 7 p.m. In February 2018, she’ll have
events in New Delhi, Mumbai and Ahmedabad, India. Exact details of the India
tour can be found at her author website.
Congratulations on the book and the launch, Sujata. I'm really looking forward to reading it!
ReplyDeleteHooray for you, Sujata. My friends and family had nothing but praise for our conversation about our shared themes. Fingers crossed that the weather doesn't torture you on your tour, my writing sister!
ReplyDeleteHoping we can do it again. SOON!
Reading it now and can't wait to see you in SF...travel safe!!
ReplyDeleteOh Sujata, this sounds great. A historical feminist mystery with a city as a co-star. I'm looking forward to reading it.
ReplyDeleteI'm so sorry I missed you and Annamaria in NYC and then missed you in Scottsdale, but I'm not as tough as you because I've chosen to be on tour out West, leaving the rough weather all to you, including snow and cold...at least for another week. Congratulations on "The Widows of Malabar Hill," as I'm hearing only great things about it from all the bookstores I'm in...and I'll get my own copy as soon as I'm back in NYC don't have to lug it in my luggage. :)
ReplyDeleteCannot wait to read this book! It's on library hold, and it's frustrating that the New York Public Library system has only a few copies with many holds.
ReplyDeleteFascinating topic. And it's getting great reviews.