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Pride, prejudice, and other flavors : a novel  Cover Image E-book E-book

Pride, prejudice, and other flavors : a novel

Dev, Sonali (author.).

Summary: "Award-winning author Sonali Dev launches a new series about the Rajes, an immigrant Indian family descended from royalty, who have built their lives in San Francisco."--

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780062839060
  • ISBN: 0062839063
  • ISBN: 9780062839053
  • ISBN: 0062839055
  • Physical Description: remote
    1 online resource (viii, 481, 6 pages)
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : William Morrow Paperbacks, [2019]

Content descriptions

General Note:
Text followed by P.S. section of insights, interviews & more.
Series information from Goodreads.com.
Source of Description Note:
Print version record.
Subject: Neurosurgeons -- Fiction
East Indian Americans -- Fiction
Cooks -- Fiction
San Francisco (Calif.) -- Fiction
East Indian Americans -- California -- San Francisco -- Fiction
FICTION / Contemporary Women
FICTION / Romance / Contemporary
FICTION / Family Life
Cooks
East Indian Americans
Neurosurgeons
California -- San Francisco
Genre: Electronic books.
Electronic books.
Domestic fiction.
Fiction.
Romance fiction.
Love stories.
Domestic fiction.
Romance fiction.

Electronic resources


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2019 April #2
    Dr. Trisha Raje is an accomplished surgeon, and she is about to perform a groundbreaking, tumor-removing surgery. The operation will, however, leave her patient, an artist, blind. Trisha's brother is running for governor, thus fulfilling her family's ambitious political dreams, and his events are being catered by DJ Caine, a mixed-race British chef with a model's good looks. DJ also happens to be the sister of Trisha's patient. Like a gender-swapped Pride and Prejudice, sparks fly during Trisha and DJ's first meeting when DJ overhears Trisha saying she'd never stoop to dating "the hired help." But Trisha and DJ must reverse their initial impressions of each other and work together if they want to see DJ's sister survive her surgery and Trisha's brother win the gubernational race, especially with con-woman Julia Wickham on the prowl. Dev's fifth novel faces such issues as cultural assimilation, familial forgiveness, and medical ethics head-on. Her descriptions of DJ's culinary delights, whether from DJ's passionate perspective or from Trisha's, are mouthwatering. Ideal for romantics and foodies alike. Copyright 2019 Booklist Reviews.
  • BookPage Reviews : BookPage Reviews 2019 June
    Pride, prejudice and pakoras

    It's been over 200 years since the death of Jane Austen, and it's a testament to her storytelling that variations on Pride and Prejudice continue to charm readers over and over again. But it's also a testament to the authors of these latest releases that their takes on the classic feel current, relevant and new. 

    Uzma Jalaluddin's debut novel, Ayesha at Last, challenges expectations right from the start by moving Austen's story from the much-romanticized drawing rooms of Regency England into a community of Muslim immigrants in Canada. As you might imagine, there's (unfortunately) plenty of prejudice to spare, particularly towards Khalid Mirza, a computer programmer in Toronto whose devout Muslim faith and strict adherence to tradition make him an immediate target. But he's not above a little hasty judgment himself, leading to instant conflict with Ayesha Shamsi when he meets her at an open-mic poetry event. Something about Ayesha moves Khalid, but this also disturbs him, since he's been raised to believe that love is meant to come after marriage—a marriage that must be arranged by his family and his bride's. Jalaluddin's modern story blends shockingly well with the original plot of Pride and Prejudice. Khalid and Ayesha's close-knit Indian-Canadian community bears a striking resemblance to Regency-era British society, with its sharply defined ranks, rapid-fire gossip, emphasis on parents arranging matches and potential for a scandal to sink the matrimonial fortunes of an entire family. Would a modern Elizabeth Bennet, living in England, worry that her sister's elopement would cast a stain on the family? Nope. But a modern Ayesha Shamsi would.

    The blistering dynamic between Darcy and Elizabeth has been captured in many different forms over the years, but in Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors, Sonali Dev absolutely nails it to the wall. Her take on Austen borrows its structure from the original but weaves in engrossing new plot threads and dynamic emotional twists. Trisha Raje is a renowned neurosurgeon, the descendant of actual Indian royalty and the sister of the leading candidate for governor of California, so perhaps she has some justification if she is, indeed, proud. (Spoiler: She is.) But her behavior makes it all too easy for DJ Caine—an accomplished chef who has used his skills and reputation to rise above a background of poverty and racism—to willfully misunderstand her. (Spoiler: He does.) However, DJ also happens to need Trisha, since she's the only surgeon who can successfully extract the brain tumor that's killing his sister. Not to mention that he can't pay the medical bills without the catering contract he hopes to secure from Trisha's fabulously wealthy, influential family. Dev pushes the couple together in an exquisitely agonizing dance of one step forward, two steps back as DJ's wounded pride and Trisha's social awkwardness turn every conversation into a worst-case scenario. Pride, Prejudice, and Other Flavors is surprising and unexpected, delivering unapologetic lessons about what prejudice looks like today. From police discrimination opening Trisha's eyes to her own privilege to a late-in-the-story confession darkly echoing the #MeToo movement, Dev transforms a 200-year-old tale into a searing, clear-eyed portrait of our current reality.

    Copyright 2019 BookPage Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2019 February #2
    A workaholic, socially inept Indian-American brain surgeon is caught off guard by her attraction to a Rwandan/Anglo-Indian chef in this rewrite of Pride and Prejudice. Trisha Raje is a princess whose family prides itself on its aristocratic Indian roots as well as its integration into American life. The Rajes are preparing for their scion's gubernatorial campaign in the Bay Area when Trisha rejoins them after a period of estrangement (caused by her former college roommate). She and chef Darcy "DJ" Caine meet at a political event and sparks fly, but for all the wrong reasons. While the two try to smooth things over, subsequent encounters exacerbate their hostility and class divide. Yet, as any Austen fan knows, the fallout of their pride and biases will eventually be resolved. Dev (A Distant Heart, 2017, etc.) credibly reworks a beloved novel to include diverse representation, and her use of dual points of view reveals the internal lives of both protagonists. DJ's love for Ind ian cooking is also an interesting flip of a more traditional script. But Dev creates equivalents to Regency England partly through a discomfiting choice to valorize Trisha's royal Indian genes—not only does she descend from ancestors who fought the medieval Islamic Mughal rulers and the British Empire and joined the Indian freedom struggle, her relatives are good royals who practice noblesse oblige (including on visits to Africa) and nurture a household (including a member who is differently abled) and have an upper-class sense of art and music. This complimentary take on the one percent is common in the genre, but what is problematic here is that romanticizing a royal identity normalizes the caste hierarchy still practiced (albeit illegally) in South Asian society, including in the contemporary diaspora. So while this is undoubtedly a charming attempt to weave in Indian history and Maharashtrian culture (and address #MeToo), the novel is limited to a lovely but upper - class Hindu family's tribulations and triumphs, reiterating a tendency among Indian cultural producers to limit happily-ever-afters to this group. The first in a multicultural #OwnVoices romance series, with an enemies-to-lovers central plot and distinctive supporting characters whose histories and dramas play out alongside the love story. Copyright Kirkus 2019 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • Library Journal Reviews : LJ Reviews 2019 April

    DJ Caine, a multiracial British Cordon Bleu-trained chef, is dismayed to learn that the arrogant woman who invaded "his" kitchen, almost tipped over his caramel, and then referred to him as "the hired help" is Trisha Raje, the brilliant doctor he's counting on to save his sister Emma's life. No slouch in the talent department himself, DJ knows he has no choice but to tamp down his resentment and find a way to get along with Trisha, not only for Emma's sake but also for his career as a personal chef. Then the sparks that fly between them turn to attraction, confusing them both and leading to a union that is profound and totally fresh. A career-focused heroine who's unrivaled in the operating room but lost when it comes to relationships and a conflicted hero whose food is pure magic sort their way through prejudices, first impressions, miscommunications, and family expectations in a story alight with unforgettable characters. VERDICT With humor, insight, and culinary descriptions so rich the tantalizing aromas of curry and cilantro practically waft from the pages, Dev's latest draws readers into a tangled world of class, cultural, and political issues in a delicious riff on Pride and Prejudice. Dev (A Distant Heart) lives in the Chicago area. [See Prepub Alert, 11/26/18.]

    Copyright 2019 Library Journal.
  • Publishers Weekly Reviews : PW Reviews 2019 March #3

    Dev (A Bollywood Affair) debuts a sweeping series starring the Raje family, immigrants descended from Indian royalty who are making a dazzling mark on American society, with this romance based very loosely on Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. Dr. Trisha Raje is a brilliant neurosurgeon with little time for love or family. Multiracial British chef DJ Caine has cared for his younger sister all their lives and has assumed the burden of her exorbitant medical bills from fighting a progressive brain tumor. When DJ is hired by Trisha's socialite mother to cater an important event, the two butt heads; DJ finds Trisha attractive but thinks she has terrible manners. Upon realizing DJ's beloved sister is also Trisha's beloved patient—who's currently refusing treatment—the dueling duo is forced to collude to find a life-saving solution. Over time, their antipathy gradually shifts to love, but the return of Raje family foe Julia Wickham risks disrupting their growing romance. Dev adroitly addresses matters of racism, classism, rape culture, and immigrant experiences in this entertaining contemporary story. Austen fans will find that little of the original remains; where Austen's focus was on women, Dev harps on the importance of being validated by men. Taken on its own, though, this is a complex and riveting work. Agent: Claudia Cross, Folio Literary Mgmt. (May)

    Copyright 2019 Publishers Weekly.
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