Qamar — who calls herself an “aunty survivor” — combines her striking illustrations with scenarios that many adolescent desi girls can relate to and gives tips on how to deal with them. She tells you how to pick a restaurant where you can go on a date with your white boyfriend without the risk of being caught by any of your aunties; she shares step-by-step recipes for traditional food that can be easily made by a campus girl on a budget; she dispenses pointers on how to wrap a sari, her best tricks for dodging the chappal your mother will throw at you when you mess things up and she advises you on how to deal with racism.
On the surface, Trust No Aunty appears to be a book of funny advice. Deep down, however, when read between the lines, one realises that it tackles serious issues that South Asian women face when living in the West, where traditions and cultural practices are not the same as those in their homeland. And although it mainly talks about the West, modern girls in the East can also relate to it. For instance, Qamar writes: “For as long as I can remember, I have heard my mother and my aunties scream the phrase ‘Log kya kahein ge’ [what will people say]. … Every lifestyle decision was measured against what opinion our neighbours would have on the matter.” These matters encompass everything from the seemingly innocuous — girls joining a sports team or boys taking up singing — to bigger issues such as divorce and mental illness, discussions of which were shunned in order to “avoid the criticism of strangers.”
Along with telling funny anecdotes from her own life, Qamar also addresses issues within the South Asian community, such as the obsession with fair complexion, skin bleaching and removing body hair. At the same time, she draws a distinction between cultural appreciation and appropriation and hits out at whites for adopting Asian culture in inappropriate ways, such as the trend among non-desis of wearing a bindi to the Coachella music festival.
From time to time she throws up scenarios that all of us may encounter at some point and presents two ways of dealing with them: there is a “rookie move” which you are not supposed to make and a “boss move” which you should. However, despite all the tips and tricks for surviving the attack of the aunties, Trust No Aunty cannot be called a life-changing or life-saving book. It’s a fun read and its most profound lesson is perhaps the reminder to young women that, in a world drifting away from traditional practices, your best bet is to not trust any aunties. Instead, trust yourself and your own instincts.
The reviewer is a member of staff
Trust No Aunty
By Maria Qamar
Touchstone, US
ISBN: 978-1501154737
192pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, June 3rd, 2018