Lush, immersive stories set in India and America about people trying to make families.
Children—the fierce desire for them, the heartbreak of miscarriage, and the matter of caring for them—knit this collection together. In the title story, Nikhil fantasizes about raising a child with his lover, Sharma, but such a thing is still impossible in 1980s India: “The country is changing,” Nikhil says. “A child diapered by two men,” Sharma replies. “Your country is changing faster than my country is changing.” In “The Import,” Raj and his wife, Bethany, bring a young woman from India to New York to care for their 3-year-old and help them restore their “domestic bliss” only to learn that the woman has left behind her own 5-year-old daughter. In “Lilavati’s Fire,” Aparna tries to fill the void created by her son’s departure into adulthood and her somewhat strained relationship with her husband by building a plane in her garage. This is one of the collection’s standouts, offering an emotionally stirring exploration of the counterforces of intimacy and routine, being grounded and taking flight. Elsewhere, adoption is the means through which people try to make families, and here Chakrabarti mounts a searing critique of its sometimes-exploitative nature. That’s the scenario in “Daisy Lane” when an American couple comes to northern India to pick up their baby. When they learn that the baby might have an older sister, they think they’re being tricked into taking two children. While such people probably exist, as fictional characters they’re a bit too shallow and unlikable, and the story falls short. But Chakrabarti teases out the devastating consequences of how economic inequity drives adoption in “The Fortunes of Others,” a story about lost and found families told from the perspective of an Afghan refugee living in India. This one will make you cry.
Beautiful, thought-provoking work about the costs of wanting children.