Review: India’s Partition in deeply human debut novel
Star-crossed lovers. Intoxicating scents. Old war journals containing ghosts and secrets. What more could you want in a work of historical fiction?
Aanchal Malhotra’s debut novel “The Book of Everlasting Things” paints a riveting picture of the 1947 Partition of India using all senses — especially and unusually leaning into smell.
The Vij family, Hindus living in Lahore who become minor celebrities as perfumers, are well known and highly regarded for their unsurpassed ittar, extracted from flowers.
This success attracts the Khans, a Muslim family whose patriarch teaches calligraphy at the Wazir Khan Mosque across town. On a fateful visit to the Vij shop, in 1938, it’s the young Firdaus Khan’s scent that bewitches perfuming apprentice Samir Vij.
Over the next 10 years, their relationship grows from the curiosity of children to the fierce and longing love of young adults.
But Partition takes “starcrossed lovers” to a new level as violence takes hold of Lahore, threatening to leave no person untouched by the impending split that would result in Hindu-majority India and Muslim-majority Pakistan.
To truly understand the history and the characters, Malhotra brings us back to Samir’s uncle — the first in his family to enlist in the army — witnessing firsthand the horrors of World War I trenches for the sake of India’s colonizer, Great Britain.
Loving relationships are laid bare in their many forms: mentorship, friendship, romantic love, marital partnership, parental affection — and each of these through various stages.
Having already proved her deep knowledge of Partition in her previous two nonfiction works, along with over a dozen articles and other works, Malhotra tried her hand at longform fiction and succeeded with elegance.
At all turns, “The Book of Everlasting Things” is deeply human, with careful attention paid to both factual and emotional accuracy.