Before you get to know this incredible writer, I wanted you to know that Sonali is giving away a copy of A BOLLYWOOD AFFAIR, her RITA finalist book for BEST FIRST BOOK.
MEET SONALI DEV
Award winning author, Sonali Dev, writes Bollywood-style love stories that let her explore issues faced by women around the world while still indulging her faith in a happily ever after.
Sonali’s novels have been
on Library Journal, NPR, Washington Post and Kirkus Best Books lists.
She won the American Library Association’s award for best romance in
2014, is a RITA Finalist, RT Reviewer Choice Award Nominee, and winner of
the RT Seal of Excellence. Sonali lives in the Chicago suburbs with
her very patient and often amused husband and two teens who demand both
patience and humor, and the world’s most perfect dog. Find out more at www.sonalidev.com.
Nan: What an impressive list of awards for a fabulous writer!
Let's talk about A CHANGE OF HEART which releases September 27, 2016.
Dr. Nikhil ‘Nic’ Joshi had it all—marriage, career, purpose. Until, while working for Doctors Without Borders in a Mumbai slum, his wife, Jen, discovered a black market organ transplant ring. Before she could expose the truth, Jen was killed.Two years after the tragedy, Nic is a cruise ship doctor who spends his days treating seasickness and sunburn and his nights in a boozy haze. On one of those blurry evenings on deck, Nic meets a woman who makes a startling claim: she received Jen’s heart in a transplant and has a message for him. Nic wants to discount Jess Koirala’s story as absurd, but there’s something about her reckless desperation that resonates despite his doubts.
Jess has spent years working her way out of a nightmarish life in Calcutta and into a respectable Bollywood dance troupe. Now she faces losing the one thing that matters—her young son, Joy. She needs to uncover the secrets Jen risked everything for; but the unforeseen bond that results between her and Nic is both a lifeline and a perilous complication.
Delving beyond the surface of modern Indian-American life, acclaimed author Sonali Dev’s page-turning novel is both riveting and emotionally rewarding—an extraordinary story of human connection, bravery, and hope.
READ A LITTLE, BUY THE BOOK
Nikhil’s head felt like
someone had squeezed it through a liquidizer. Whiskey burn stung his brain as
if he had snorted the stuff instead of pouring it down his gullet. He leaned
into the polished brass railing, letting the wind pummel his face. The ship,
all twenty-four floors of behemoth decadence, was like the damn Burj Al Arab
speeding across the Caribbean. And yet the only way to know they were moving
was to watch the waves. His fingers released the glass sitting on the railing
and it flew into the night, disappearing long before it hit the inky water.
He imagined hopping on the railing, imagined
being that glass. Boom! And it would be over. Finally, there’d be peace.
The sky was starting to ignite at the edges,
as though the glass of Jack he’d just tossed into the night had splattered
amber flecks across the horizon. It would go up in flames soon. All of it
orange and gold when the sun broke through the rim of the ocean. It was time
for him to leave. The last thing he needed was the mockery of another breaking
dawn.
“Sir, why don’t you stay and watch today?” A
man leaned on his mop, staring at Nikhil from under his windblown hair, that
tentative, guilty look firmly in place. The look people couldn’t seem to keep
off their faces when they talked to Nikhil—the one that announced, rather
loudly, that they were terrified of intruding. Because The Pathetic Dr. Joshi
with the giant hole in his heart might break down right before their eyes.
“Very beautiful it is, no?” The man pointed
his chin at the burgeoning sunrise that had just pumped Nikhil’s lungs full of
pain and waited for a response. But while the blazing pain in Nikhil’s heart
was functioning at full capacity, the booze incapacitated his tongue. He wanted
to react, wanted to have a conversation with the man who was obviously starved
for it. He searched for words to say, but he came up empty.
Now there was a word: empty.
Still empty after two years.
The deck hand’s smiling mouth drooped into a
frown. He turned away and started working the spotless floor with his mop.
Shit, had he just thought of the man as a deckhand? Jen would have clonked him
upside the head for it. Jen would’ve—
“What’s your name?” Conversation was better
than the high definition telecast of memories that kicked off in his brain.
“Gavin.” The man looked surprised. “From
Goa. In India.”
Great. Goa. Jen’s favorite place in the
whole world.
The steady boat pitched beneath Nikhil’s
feet. His stomach lurched. The world summersaulted around him. He leaned over
the brass railing and tried not to throw up his guts.
He failed. When the heaving stopped, the
world was still spinning too fast. He lifted his T-shirt and wiped the
foul-smelling puke off his mouth. Gavin from Goa was walking across the deck
with a bottle of water in his hand.
Nikhil should have thanked him, should’ve
told him he was fine. Instead he turned toward the stairs. In the light of day
he could talk to people, pretend to be alive, but now when the world was as
dark as his insides, he couldn’t. The stairs dived into the lower deck. He
grabbed the railing and stumbled down, landing on his ass on the last step.
The smell of chlorine from the three-tiered
pool cut past the smell of regurgitated Jack on his shirt, setting off the
churning in his stomach again. He pulled himself up and dragged himself to the
elevator, rubbing his face on his shoulder like the snotty, cranky brat he used
to be. But no tears came to dilute the unrelenting burn of wanting.
How could it be that he was still here? The
sunset, the sunrise, it was all still here when she was gone.
He wanted her back. God. Please. Give her
back to me.
“Look what you’ve done to yourself, Spikey.”
His head snapped up. He didn’t remember
stepping out of the elevator, but he spun around now, his breath loud in the
absolute silence. The brightly lit corridor swirled around him. The bloodred
carpet, the gold-striped walls, every inch of garish splendor echoed that word.
“Spikey.”
There wasn’t a soul in sight.
He followed the echoing word across the
hallway and around the corner, his racing heart dragging the rest of his body
along. He turned the corner, expecting to see nothing. Expecting to chase the
sound the way he’d been chasing his dead wife’s memories for two years.
A shadow clad in black stood all the way
across the corridor. A wisp of dark against the overpowering gold of the walls.
Bright red strands cascaded around her face and into her jaw in a razor-sharp
edge. Hair he knew better than he knew his own name.
He reached out and leaned into the wall, but
the ship continued to seesaw beneath him. She held steady for a moment and then
she was gone, melting around the corner.
He sprang after her, running until he was
standing in the spot she’d been in. Another long corridor stretched out in
front of him. It showed no signs of life, only an endless line of doors
connected by endless golden molding, and the endless buzz of the lights
overhead.
The walls closed in around him, forcing him
to stumble forward. His breath ricocheted against the heavily textured
wallpaper.
And then there she was again, a flash of red
hair peeking around the corner. He ran at it, at her. But his drunken legs
tripped over themselves and he splattered flat on his face, arms and legs
splayed like a dead arthropod someone had swatted into the floor.
When he lifted his head she was gone.
His face fell back on the rough, deep pile
of the carpet with its polythene smell, and everything went black.
Everything except the panacean sound of that name.
Spikey.
Only one person called him that.
Jen, his wife. And she’d been dead for two
years.
Nan: Oh wow! As usual you expose so deep emotions in your work!
CLICK ON YOUR FAVORITE RETAILER TO PREORDER THE BOOK
A LIGHTING ROUND OF Q&A WITH SONALI DEV
NAN: How often do you get lost in a story?
SONALI: My
family would tell you I’m lost in a story all the time. Usually multiple
stories at any given time because I’m always writing— if not actively then in
my head. My stories live inside my head for a few years before I actually write
them down. And then of course I’m also often lost in someone else’s story.
Because there’s never a time when I’m not reading.
Nan: Oh yeah!
SONALI: I
was eight and it was a play about mistaken identities. For those of you who
don’t know, I grew up in India and we used to have a huge celebration in our
neighborhood for Diwali, which is a really big Indian holiday. My motley group
of friends performed the play on the huge makeshift stage built in our central
playground. The plot went something like this: a servant in this home is named
after an Indian god and everyone in the family calls out to him so much (the
poor harried man) that the god actually comes down from his heavenly perch.
Much slapstick humor ensues with food fights, someone’s sari falling of and
what not.
Nan: Any video of this amazing debut?
NAN: Do you write while listening to music? If so what
kind?
SONALI: When
I’m actually writing— that is putting words down on paper I need a fair amount
of silence. Music, conversations, they can go on around me, but I’m not
listening. However, while I’m writing but not putting words down— as in, living
inside the book in my head while pretending to be involved in my
outside-the-book life — I have certain songs that I listen to all the time. And
by all the time I mean my family throws headphones at me because they get so
sick of listening to these songs twenty times a day. So, yes my books have
sound tracks and they’re usually songs from Bollywood movies. Usually, hyper
romantic ballads that somehow fit my stories perfectly.
NAN: What is your favorite tradition from your childhood
that you would love to pass on or did pass on to your children?
SONALI: I
grew up in a family that centered around food. When our extended family
gathered for holidays or events, one meal time was spent discussing what the
next meal was going to be. Celebrating any milestone meant going out to eat or
cooking something special. I think we’ve definitely passed that on to our
children. They are foodies in every sense of the word. The other thing that I
grew up with that I passed on was travel. Sometimes I think our family
vacations define our lives.
Nan: I love the pictures of food that you post on Facebook!
NAN: What three things are, at this moment, in your
heroine’s purse, satchel, reticule, weapons belt or amulet bag (whatever she
carries)?
SONALI: Jess
is a mom above all else, so always a little neosporin and bandaids and a little
snack. She also has a certain something in her bag that she’s using to trap
Nic. But if I told you more, my life might be in danger.
Nan: Oooh, intriguing!
NAN: Benedict Cumberbatch or Chris Pine?
SONALI: Oh
most definitely Chris Pine. And it’s not just those blue eyes. Who can resist that
combination of cockiness and intensity? Like he could totally infuriate you and
really get all your deepest darkest issues in one fell swoop. As for Benedict
Cumberbatch, I’d love to have a beer with him, you know. And probably go watch
a Broadway show or two with him. I think he’s adorable and brilliant, but he
doesn’t do anything to heat me up.
NAN GOTTA ASK: Tea or Coffee? And how do you take it?
SONALI'S GOTTA ANSWER: I’m
a chai girl. Every morning I boil a big pot of ginger tea and drink it all day
with milk. With biscuits (that’s what we call cookies/crackers in India) dunked
in it. Sadly, though my children, even my dog, have taken to dunking biscuits
in my chai and this means an awful gunky mess at the bottom of my cup. I have
to sometimes hide my chai cup to prevent dunkage.
UP NEXT FOR SONALI
The next one isn’t out until next year but my award winning debut A
BOLLYWOOD AFFAIR was reissued on August 1 and is available with this lovely new
cover.
Nan: It is beautiful!
FIND SONALI
Website: https://sonalidev.com/
TWITTER: https://twitter.com/Sonali_Dev
Nan: Thank you, Sonali for spending the day with the crew!
SONALI WANTS TO KNOW: What was the last book you read that was completely outside of your comfort zone?
How did you like it?
Sonali is giving away a copy of her RITA finalist book--A BOLLYWOOD AFFAIR.
I can't say that any book has taken me out of my reading comfort zone. I am an eclectic reader though.
ReplyDeleteHi Mary,
DeleteThanks for stopping by!
Me too. Totally eclectic. Any must-read suggestions?
Thanks for being here, Sonali!
ReplyDeleteWhen I was doing my RITA reads last year, Fever Pitch took me out of my comfort zone - but it was fabulous.
Can't wait to read the new book!
Thank you so much for having me, Nan!
DeleteThis was a lot of fun.
I've heard such great things about that book.
Hugs!
What a great excerpt--and that ending hook gave me chills! I love your writing and can't wait for your release day!
ReplyDeleteYes, yes, to Chris Pine. :)
Hello darling! Thank you so much!
DeleteAnd sigh. Chris. Pine!
Hugs,
Awesome cover, Sonali, and love the excerpt. Looking forward to reading it.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Sandy!
DeleteI feel a bit guilty about this, but this is my favorite cover of all mine.
Can't wait to hear what you think.
Hugs,
Adore both of you and this wonderful interview! And such a captivating excerpt, Sonali! Not that I'm at all surprised, you goddess of words. Can't wait for A CHANGE OF HEART's release!
ReplyDeleteAlso...I might've done a little dunk and run in your delicious chai, so go easy on the kids and dog. ;)
xoxo + an IOU for one chai
LOL, Darcy. My chai lives for dunkage (that poor creature of habit)
DeleteThank you!!
Hi Nan and Sonali! Very fun post, the blurb sounds all kinds of awesome, and I love the chai story. Clearly I am not reading enough books out of my comfort zone because I can't think of the last one I read that was! Yikes! What can I say, I'm a comfy reader I guess. ;) Love to you both. Always enjoy Get Lost in a Story!
ReplyDeleteHello there, darling!
DeleteI love comfy readers.
The chai is kind of fun. Except I have to throw the bottom part away.
Hugs,
Sonali
can't think of any
ReplyDeletebn100candg at hotmail dot com
Can't wait for the book.
ReplyDeleteHi Priya!
DeleteCan't wait to hear what you think of it.
Can't wait for the book.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations, Priya, you've won my give away- a copy of A BOLLYWOOD AFFAIR.
DeletePlease send me a direct message on facebook or twitter with your mailing address. Thanks!
I am reading A Bollywood Affair, after devouring Bollywood Bride. The story flows like water, the characters are engaging and the emotions are captivating. I so thoroughly enjoy and appreciate your novels!
ReplyDeleteP.S. Oh, no! Jen is dead?
Thanks David. It's my favorite thing to hear a reader say.
DeleteAs for Jen, I know. It was out of my hands, it just happened, and Nic had to find his happiness.
Can't wait to hear what you think of COH.
Sonali
Hi Sonali! I love the new cover of ABA and I'm so looking forward to reading ACoH.
ReplyDeleteI wouldn't say it was out of my comfort zone but I recently read an ARC of Mischling by Affinity Konar. As is to be expected, it had its heartbreaking moments. I had to take my time with it. That being said, it was wonderful. Such depth to her writing and characterizations. I highly recommend it.
Loved your book blurb & excerpt for A CHANGE OF HEART, Sonali! And I agree with Nan, I'd like to see a video for that first story/play you crafted :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jacqui! And yeah, um, the best part of my childhood was that there were no video cameras. LOL.
DeleteHugs,
I'm afraid I usually don't read books too far outside my comfort zone, but I did finish my first steampunk novel, Rebel Mechanics by Shanna Swendson, yesterday and I did like it.
ReplyDeleteI'm looking forward to A Change of Heart.
Kind regards, Tineke
Hi Tineke,
ReplyDeleteI have a bunch of steampunks in my TBR pile. I'll add this one.
Thanks so much for stopping by!