Antelope Valley Press

Review: India’s Partition in deeply human debut novel

- By DONNA EDWARDS Associated Press

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.

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