I enjoyed reading this, but I didn’t actually like this one as much as I’d expected. I think it’s because Pride, Prejudice and Other Flavors was such an amazing book, where I highlighted something brilliant every couple pages, so I was somewhat disappointed to find Recipe for Persuasion was just a nice Austen-inspired romance. This was closer to The Bollywood Bride, both dramatic romances, with Indian-American families and true love. Worth a read, but not the OMG you gotta get this now feeling I had about Pride, Prejudice and Other Flavors.
Still, the book has the same complex characters and sensory details I enjoyed in the first one. The author isn’t afraid to show her heroines in less-that-ideal situations, creating women who screw up and are still loved by their family and friends. There was a lot more drama, and more about the Rajes’ background which added depth to Ashna, a supporting character in the first novel. You could see how one generation affected the next, and how the special friendships within the family kept everyone going. But the drama unfolded into more and more scenes where the entire plot would resolve instantly if anyone talked honestly to anyone else, instead of shutting off and storming out.
This is another book to make you hungry. Ashna and her old love, footballer Rico, are paired on a cooking show, and their assignments are these gorgeous Brazilian / Indian fusion dishes (when they’re not staring at each other in lust and/or anger). The details about scent and texture just made the food even more tempting. There are other sensory details enriching the book (Ashna’s hair, for example), but let’s be honest, I love a good story about delicious food.
If you liked the mix of Jane Austen and reality shows found in Recipe for Persuasion,check out Curtis Sittenfeld’s Eligible, too. Also, let’s become friends immediately.
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