SILVER DREAMS is my fourth book, published late 2016 which holds a unique record:
that of being the first Senior Romance in recent Indian English literature. Set at a number of locales described in the book, for a romance, it also sets another unique record.
Usually it is women who are partial to romances. But in this case, it is male readers who have sent me the more graphic reviews of the book. Does that go to show that the new metro Man has come into his own and can relish and understand something written by a woman for women?
One Sample:
that of being the first Senior Romance in recent Indian English literature. Set at a number of locales described in the book, for a romance, it also sets another unique record.
Usually it is women who are partial to romances. But in this case, it is male readers who have sent me the more graphic reviews of the book. Does that go to show that the new metro Man has come into his own and can relish and understand something written by a woman for women?
One Sample:
Golden Dreams
Madhu Menon
By the
time I reached the end of Kusum Choppra’s “Silver Dreams”, I felt certain she could
do a sequel titled “Golden Dreams”, in a silver, golden, platinum series.
Three successful
books, Kusum’s fourth one comes with immeasurable courage, pleasantries,
realities and messages for not just the silver lined ones, but for all those reading
for pleasure and intellectual stimulation. In very few words, Silver Dreams is a 2nd
innings love story, between a sixty plus, beautiful lady and a seventy plus, handsome
man.
But
that description would be diminishing the writer’s creation of a mosaic of meticulous
characterizations, emotions, understandings, adjustments and lovemaking. Yes,
love making, as a much better an option to unnecessary family fights, hierarchy
issues, the author suggests.
Old age syndromes imminent at fifty plus, I
almost believed romance was over for my 45+ wife and me. But rejuvenation set
in by the end of Silver Dreams. Why not 2nd innings with your own partner?
That’s what Silver Dreams is all about. If you are sixty or seventy+, you’ll
love this book; I recommend reading it.
If you
are nowhere there, maybe in your thirties, this book will offer space and
courage to plan for a second innings. You need not find a new partner, just step
away from a disturbing past and stop worrying about an unknown future; what you
have is today, make it a meaningful, lovable one.
As a
reader turning to romantic fiction after recent trysts with books of the
calibre of Zorba the Greek by Nikos
Kazantzakis, Book of Mirdad by Mikhail Naimy and Ishmael by Daniel Quinn, I initially
found it tough swimming through whirlpools of relationships, connections and
two families with extended family members. But gradually the wonderful
relationships, in laws and outlaws coming together grew on me despite the taking
in of all extended family members --- alien to a Me, totally ignorant of any
relations beyond my wife’s and my siblings, their respective families and our
own child.
Intriguingly,
Silver Dreams has no obvious protagonist, carrying the burden of the story. Exception: this all knowing, motivating, punishing
and loving lady, Kinnary. It is, in fact the story of her struggle to recreate her
own world, that comes with much persistence, pain and sacrifice. Alongside is her Rana with genetic gifts of voice
and a handsome appearance, who helps her create that world, submitting
willingly, yet steering away the evils, with his love.
I found
Rana’s love amazing; was it obsession with this newfound beauty, compensation
for his lost time or taking the full advantage of the time left to him? His commitment to his Kinnary, despite roller
coasting health issues, at the peak of every pleasant event, underlines his firm
commitment, unshaken by any storms. Thus, Rana could well be every lady’s Ultimate
Male Lover.
Kinnary
emerges as an empowered lady, with a failed past with a typical aggressive MCP.
Or did that earlier pain, struggle and loss of self-esteem later empower her, making
her over cautious to Rana’s advances?
Rebels
abound, but the story is that of a couple embracing love in the evening of life;
a story of positivity, possibilities. Among the rebels is a stepson who remains
aloof throughout to deliver a shocker close to the climax. And just when you
expect an imminent tragic end, the author walks her old couple through a garden
full of flowers and fragrance.
Let me
warn readers, this is an Indian story, immersed in North Indian ethos, customs,
perspective and traditions. If you are not North Indian, you will be guided
through the concepts with translation in bracketed italics, as the story flows
through marriage ceremonies, home coming rituals and other customs. The old Hindi songs are also characters that
flow with the story.
A
female author’s writings are meant to be feminine, but so what? Don’t all
readers need to know the feminine side of writing? Kusum Choppra gives you wonderful
insights to femininity with explicit, intimate, soulful and physical indulgence.
Despite explicit exposure of physical exploration, the author remains a spirited
feminist. Yet she dignifies family value systems with a smile when Kinnary
accepts the sindhoor from her Rana on one ceremonial occasion.
Available at amazon.in
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