Lies and Other Love Languages by Sonali Dev

Robin’s Rave Reviews

Lies and Other Love Languages by Sonali Dev leads readers to ask thought-provoking questions: Is it ever okay to lie or keep a secret? Is withholding information a form of lying? What circumstances would it take to share a long-hidden truth? How far would a person go to make a loved one happy?

Photo of author Sonali Dev
Author Sonali Dev

Lies and Other Love Languages is my first novel by Sonali Dev. It is a story of friendship, romantic love, grief, motherhood, and the expectations, influence and support of family. Told through multiple POVs of an American family of Indian descent, readers will get a peek inside Indian culture, customs, and family values as they deal with universal issues.

The story includes a lovable cast of supporting characters, but it revolves around three women: Vandy Guru, her daughter Mallika, and Vandy’s friend Rani Parekh. Starting in the present, Vandy is panicked because her daughter is missing. Vandy, an advice columnist and public speaker, is struggling with the grief of losing her husband, and now this! Mallika is a young adult trying to make a name for herself through her unique mix of traditional Indian and modern dance styles. Feeling dejected after an audition, she joins a genetic study. She wants to know why she doesn’t fit in with her accomplished family. The DNA results turn her world upside down. Her mother’s friend, Rani Parekh, may be the only one with the answers she seeks. Problem? The two friends haven’t spoken in many years.

Book cover of Lies and Other Love Languages by Sonali Dev

The story takes readers from the United States to Mumbai, India and from the 1970s to today. I especially enjoyed learning the backstory of Vandy and Rani. As girls, they meet at age 12 when Rani has just arrived in the U.S. to live with her aunt after her mother’s death. She is eating French fries off the concrete in front of a fast-food restaurant when Vandy and her mother, also of Indian descent, recognize her need. Vandy’s family wrap Rani in love, treating her like family. The two girls become the best of friends, like sisters. Their friendship takes them into adulthood until something came between them 27 years ago.

Although avid readers will guess the conflict early on, the author takes us on an interesting journey through the past to show how the characters get to that point. It’s more about the journey than the secret.

Before reading Lies and Other Love Languages, be aware it has these possible triggers: infertility, pregnancy loss, infidelity, and loss of a spouse.

Thank you to NetGalley and Lake Union Publishing for the ARC of this book. The opinions are my own.

Other Recommendations

Do you enjoy books about friendships that form in childhood and continue into adulthood? Then you may also like The Summer of Songbirds by Kristy Woodson Harvey. See my book review here.

Follow me on Facebook and Instagram!

@author.robin.shelley

Netgalley Professional Reader

The Unsinkable Greta James by Jennifer E. Smith

Robin’s Rave Reviews – 2022

THE UNSINKABLE GRETA JAMES by Jennifer E. Smith was a fun read by a new author to me. Whenever I had to put the book down, I couldn’t wait to get back to it. An Alaskan cruise wouldn’t be my personal first choice, but the book has the fun cruise ship vibe. 

Book Cover of The Unsinkable Greta James by Jennifer E. SmithCome aboard a cruise to Alaska with indie rock star Greta James and  her cantankerous father. Greta’s career is on shaky ground after an emotional break-down on stage due to her mother’s death. On top of that, Greta just broke off a lengthy relationship. She needs time out of the spotlight and away from performing. Her brother talks her into going on the cruise with her father to support him. This cruise was their mother’s dream, booked as a fortieth anniversary celebration, but she died before she got to go. Greta reluctantly agrees and books a room on the ship.

While on the cruise, Greta fits in a bit of romance with Ben, an author who is there to lecture on Jack London. As they start an uncertain relationship, his traditional life makes Greta question her rock star lifestyle. Also, Greta and a young girl (who idolizes her) help each other with their music. 

Greta and her father have a distance relationship. Greta questions if her brother was right. How could her presence on the trip be helping her dad through a tough time? Her father wonders if his son was right. Did Greta need him to help her through a tough time? The answer is, of course, yes to both.

I enjoyed watching the father/daughter relationship evolve in the novel. Greta begins to better understand her father and how some of her song lyrics hurt him.  Her father, even in his grief, begins to see Greta and her career in a new way.

THE UNSINKABLE GRETA JAMES by Jennifer E. Smith is her debut into adult fiction, although she has already written nine YA books. Take a vacation along with Greta when THE UNSINKABLE GRETA JAMES comes out  March 1, 2022. Consider supporting independent “mom and pop” bookstores through bookshop.org.

Check out my other blog book reviews here.

 

 

Follow me on social media –

Facebook and Instagram @author.robin.shelley

Netgalley Member Professional Reader