Slowly, through multiple flashbacks such as those of the classmate who hates Zarin, the good-looking guy whom Zarin dates and her old friend Porus, we find out more about this troubled girl. The multiple viewpoints have the potential to be a confusing, jumbled mess, but Bhathena handles them well, showing a little at a time, keeping the curiosity alive while drawing complex, three dimensional figures.
Porus and Zarin meet as children living in a Mumbai colony. While he grows into a sweet young man who forms a slow, steady friendship with the girl with the sharp tongue, she has had to learn to take care of herself amidst the gossip of her classmates, social exclusion and the abuse of her aunt. This has made her wild and rebellious, prone to sneaking out to hang with boys and smoke a few cigarettes. However, as the story progresses we realise she is a girl with depths, capable of gentleness and empathy in the midst of a life that offers her no breaks. As the narrative moves along, we meet people who came and touched Zarin’s life in different ways — some good, some bad. We encounter trauma and sexual abuse and Bhathena provides perspectives from the victim as well as the assailant in a powerful scene that is realistic without being gratuitous. The conclusion brings us back full circle to that hot afternoon with the car crash and a far greater realisation of how a life such as Zarin’s isn’t only about what reputation one leaves behind.
In a rare feat — considering how regularly characters of this age group are written in unrealistic, adult voices — Bhathena’s teenagers sound like teenagers. The trials and tribulations of this age are deftly handled and given proper attention. Parents having adulterous affairs, the lure of drugs and the pressure of one’s peers, youthful friendships that can destroy or build lives, all are part of the landscape that Bhathena explores through her flawed but honest characters.
More fascinating than her characters, however, is the setting she has used. They say one should write what one knows; no matter how controversial this advice may be, it has worked to the author’s advantage as she was born in India and grew up in Jeddah. Her familiarity with the setting lends authority to her descriptions, making her storyline authentic and her narrative believable. At times it does seem that the novel is pandering to a very Western audience, with its explanations of every single thing that might sound unfamiliar, but that also helps readers — who may not know much about the Zoroastrian faith or Gujarati family life — understand what the terms mean. One hopes that one day books from that part of the world are more widespread, allowing us to read them without needing such guides of helpful terms at the end of the book, but for now, they can prove quite useful to the unacquainted reader.
With a clear grasp of the politics of a region such as Saudi Arabia as well as an honest look at how religion and culture can be used to limit and criticise, Bhathena writes a novel that is both relevant and needed. The current rise of the #Metoo movement, along with an increased interest in conversations of sexual abuse, means that books such as this are more urgent than ever before.
The reviewer is an editor of children’s fiction
A Girl Like That
By Tanaz Bhathena
Farrar, Straus and
Giroux, US
ISBN: 978-0374305444
384pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, September 2nd, 2018