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Book Review of The Satapur Moonstone (Perveen Mistry, Bk 2)

The Satapur Moonstone (Perveen Mistry, Bk 2)
cathyskye avatar reviewed on + 2266 more book reviews


Sujata Massey's first Perveen Mistry novel, The Widows of Malabar Hill, was one of my Best Reads of 2018, so I was really looking forward to its follow-up. Not only is The Satapur Moonstone one of my Best Reads of 2019, I think it is even better than the first (multi-award-winning) book.

Massey is so very adept at guiding readers into the world of India in the 1920s. A world of arcane rules that mainly benefit British colonial rule. A world that, with the help of people like Mahatma Gandhi, is beginning to fight for its freedom. A world of incredibly wealthy maharajahs in independent states whose palaces have bronze doors and rubies inlaid in the floors. But she also shows how claustrophobic this world is. The jungle tightly wraps itself around Satapur Palace, a jungle containing all sorts of creatures that attack and kill humans. A jungle that has few paths to travel and whose rainy season makes those paths impassable and shuts the royal family away from the rest of the world.

In many ways, Satapur mirrors the rest of India. India is beginning to fight for its independence. Satapur has an old palace as well as a new palace which merges with the old to form an uneasy whole. In this divided palace live two maharanis: the dowager who refuses to relinquish her power, and the new who wants her son to have the sort of education that will help him guide his state into a brighter future.

Perveen has her work cut out for her. Somehow she has to remain true to herself while moving amongst the often overweening British, various religious factions, and dozens of royal protocols. It's not easy. There are many loathsome undercurrents simmering away in the palace. There are eyes and ears everywhere. How can she decide whom to trust?

The Satapur Moonstone immerses readers in a different world. The story is claustrophobic, its mood ominous, and it has the most delicious sense of suspense. It's not necessary to read The Widows of Malabar Hill before undertaking The Satapur Moonstone, but why deny yourself the pleasure of experiencing two excellent novels? Needless to say, I am eagerly awaiting the third book!