
The Taste of Ginger
A Novel
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Narrated by:
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Soneela Nankani
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By:
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Mansi Shah
In Mansi Shah’s stunning debut novel, a family tragedy beckons a first-generation immigrant to the city of her birth, where she grapples with her family’s past in search of where she truly belongs.
After her parents moved her and her brother to America, Preeti Desai never meant to tear her family apart. All she did was fall in love with a white Christian carnivore instead of a conventional Indian boy. Years later, with her parents not speaking to her and her controversial relationship in tatters, all Preeti has left is her career at a prestigious Los Angeles law firm.
But when Preeti receives word of a terrible accident in the city where she was born, she returns to India, where she’ll have to face her estranged parents...and the complicated past they left behind. Surrounded by the sights and sounds of her heritage, Preeti catches a startling glimpse of her family’s battles with class, tradition, and sacrifice. Torn between two beautifully flawed cultures, Preeti must now untangle what home truly means to her.
©2022 Mansi Shah (P)2021 Brilliance Publishing, Inc., all rights reserved.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Critic reviews
“Narrator Soneela Nankani takes listeners on the roller-coaster ride of emotions felt by Preeti when she returns to India for the first time since she was 7.…Nankani handles flashbacks gracefully, uses several accents to define characters, and makes Indian traditions and settings sparkle.”—AudioFile Magazine
“Narrator Soneela Nankani adeptly delivers the emotion-charged story, drawing on her skill with accents….Listeners who appreciate fiction with themes of class divisions, immigration, and self-assessment will enjoy.”—Library Journal, a Best Fiction Audiobook of 2022
“Immersive, beautiful and descriptive."—Audicted Podcast
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This was the case for Preeti Desai, a young woman trying to find herself in a new relationship with someone who is not very welcomed by her parents and that constantly made her feel like an outsider.
The taste of ginger shows us the burdens and walls society constantly puts on us, especially for immigrants or people who don't look like white Americans. Preeti constantly felt like this like an outsider, like she didn't feet in many places or situations, she had to work extra harder to fit in and to be accepted I really felt sad that Preetie felt like that for the majority of her life, navigating always with her face down not to stand or to feel different than the others.
Preetie, and her family stay longer than expected in India, something happened with Preeties brother that makes things difficult and sad creating a reef between families and siblings.
what really bothered me with this story was that many of the secondary characters suffered in a way that never felt like they recovered, I really felt sorry for what happened with Preeties friend at the bar, that situation should have happened and it was very terrible that never got resolved, that's something that I really didn't felt good with the story. no matter how the culture is I felt like it wasn't right to make that character marry someone just because of what society will say about him. it was like he destroyed all his life to make his parents happy and leave society in peace.
The ending also was not what I was looking for, Preetie understood many things about her life and her culture and traditions but it felt like she was doing all over again whatever everybody does getting married or trying to follow the rule Hindu society is known for.
it was a good book and story but I felt sad and angry at all times, is like Preetie was never happy and her family was always making sure to put so much pressure on her. is like why did you move to Aerica if you wanted to follow other costumes, why all the changes if at the end your parents will ask of you what you been running away from?
I'm not criticizing or judging the ideas and the costumes I just don't understand them, I can't live a life just to make others happy, that's not what life is about.
The narrations by Soneela Nankani were great, this is my first time listening to her work and I really like what she did with the characters and the story.
overall it was a good book
good and good
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Such a delightful journey
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A warm beautiful explanation of immigration....
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Beautiful & Deep
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It was also a story of generational differences and how families struggle to navigate them. This occurs even in the more heterogeneous societies, so it must be that much more difficult for a child straddling cultural lines of tradition and contemporary life in a ‘foreign’ environment.
Family is important. Tradition is important. Autonomy is important. This novel very adeptly exposes the conflicts that exist for many communities in a sincere and unpretentious manner that is, or should be, an informative experience for white folks who are willing to understand what it means to be ‘other’.
Brilliant novel
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Beautiful story
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Excellent story
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The descriptions of life in India
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Pleasant listen
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Nothing new here
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