Preview
  • The Arctic Curry Club

  • By: Dani Redd
  • Narrated by: Zoha Rahman
  • Length: 10 hrs and 6 mins
  • 3.8 out of 5 stars (9 ratings)

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The Arctic Curry Club

By: Dani Redd
Narrated by: Zoha Rahman
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Publisher's summary

***Exclusive audio content included with several delicious recipes narrated by the author! Listen now!!!***

It’s possible to find home in the most unexpected places…

Soon after upending her life to accompany her boyfriend Ryan to the Arctic, Maya realises it’s not all Northern Lights and husky sleigh rides. Instead, she’s facing sub-zero temperatures, 24-hour darkness, crippling anxiety – and a distant boyfriend as a result.

In her loneliest moment, Maya opens her late mother’s recipe book and cooks Indian food for the first time. Through this, her confidence unexpectedly grows – she makes friends, secures a job as a chef, and life in the Arctic no longer freezes her with fear.

But there’s a cost: the aromatic cuisine rekindles memories of her enigmatic mother and her childhood in Bangalore. Can Maya face the past and forge a future for herself in this new town? After all, there’s now high demand for a Curry Club in the Arctic, and just one person with the know-how to run it…

A tender and uplifting story about family, community, and finding where you truly belong – guaranteed to warm your heart despite the icy setting!

©2021 Dani Redd (P)2021 HarperCollins Publishers Limited
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Critic reviews

‘This unusual book was a real highlight in my festive reading this year’ My Weekly

‘Perfect for cold winter nights’ Hello

‘A heartwarming read for those long winter nights’ OK!

‘A heartwarming read for those long winter nights’ S Mag

‘An uplifting story’ Bella

‘A heartwarming story’ Fabulous

‘The perfect winter read’ My London

‘Sit back and snuggle down for just over 10 hours of warm, feel-good audio all about belonging’ The Sunday Post

‘A really different Christmas read’ Bishops Stortford Independent

What listeners say about The Arctic Curry Club

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a very good read

I loved the complexity of the main character and the lightness of even the most tumultuous parts.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Not what I hoped for

I think the publisher has done the author a disservice with the cover and synopsis, making this seem like rom-com, chick lit or a beach read set in the arctic. It isn't any of those, but rather a look at the interior experience of a young woman with an anxiety disorder. The early part of the book presents this in an accurate and sympathetic way and I became invested in Maya and her story.

Unfortunately, as this first person narrative progresses, Maya seems to be completely self-absorbed and I began to be bored. Everything is seen through the lens of her anxiety, her problems, her needs and desires, her opportunities, on and on. Several times she comments something on the order of, "I'd gotten so involved in my own world that I'd forgotten to check in on [other character,]" including her newly remarried father, only female friend in her new environment, only friend in father's new location in India, etc. It's Me Me Me, all over again.

The writing is good and the concept has such great potential that I was really disappointed in the execution. I was definitely looking for a feel-good read, but I wound up disliking the main character and what turned out to be a neatly-tied-with-a-party-bow Hallmark ending.

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