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Mission Mumbai : a novel of sacred cows, snakes, and stolen toilets

Narsimhan, Mahtab. (Author).

Dylan, an aspiring photographer, is spending a month in Mumbai with his friend Rohit Lal and his family, but knowing nothing of Indian culture, he cannot seem to do anything right (do not hit cows!)--and the situation is made worse by the tensions within the Lal family over whether Rohit should be raised in India, which Mr. Lal's wealthy sister is pushing for.

Book  - 2016
J FIC Narsi
1 copy / 0 on hold

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  • ISBN: 9780545746519
  • Physical Description 261 pages ; 22 cm
  • Edition First edition.
  • Publisher [Place of publication not identified] : [publisher not identified], 2016.

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 9780545746519
Mission Mumbai: a Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets : A Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets
Mission Mumbai: a Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets : A Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets
by Narsimhan, Mahtab
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Kirkus Review

Mission Mumbai: a Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets : A Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

This adventure-filled quest through the streets of Mumbai becomes a lesson on the value of family and friendship. Visiting Mumbai with his best friend, Rohit Lal, is the opportunity of a lifetime for budding photographer Dylan Moore. The vacation is a welcome escape from his bickering parents, and Mumbai is the perfect place for Dylan to shoot an award-winning picture. But Rohit's foul mood makes it hard for anyone to have fun. When Rohit's aunty threatens to keep Rohit in India due to his rudeness, Dylan is afraid that his holiday will be cut shortand that their friendship may be over for good. Dylan's perspective as a food-loving tourist and a photographer with keen observation skills leads to lavish descriptions of the setting. Narsimhan details the sights, sounds, and smells of Mumbai vividly without turning the book into a travelogue. Although much of the tension between Rohit and Dylan stems from lack of communication, both boys are remarkably self-aware and honest about their feelings. The strain on their friendship and their respective worries about their families provide an emotional core that anchors their high jinks. An adrenaline-charged exploration of Mumbai with two likable guides. (Fiction. 8-12) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 9780545746519
Mission Mumbai: a Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets : A Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets
Mission Mumbai: a Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets : A Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets
by Narsimhan, Mahtab
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BookList Review

Mission Mumbai: a Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets : A Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

Dylan jumps at the chance to spend three weeks in India with his best friend, Rohit. He can attend an Indian wedding, indulge his passion for food and photography, and escape his fighting parents. He hopes to take an award-winning photo and prove to his dad that photography is not a frivolous hobby. India's cacophony of sights and smells enchants Dylan, but the boys' perfect Sam and Frodo friendship unravels in the oppressive heat. Rohit is sensitive about the financial gap between their families, while Dylan envies Rohit's relationship with his mother and worries about his own parents at home. When an overbearing, wealthy aunt threatens financial blackmail to keep Rohit in India, tensions explode. The author excels at capturing life in India, but the boys' relationship never fully resonates. Humor generated by cultural differences carries the book until the end, when the plot accelerates dramatically. Readers may forgive the overabundance of fantasy references and the clunky friendship in exchange for dramatic escapes, a monsoon, and Bollywood-level wedding drama.--Harold, Suzanne Copyright 2016 Booklist

Syndetic Solutions - School Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 9780545746519
Mission Mumbai: a Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets : A Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets
Mission Mumbai: a Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets : A Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets
by Narsimhan, Mahtab
Rate this title:
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School Library Journal Review

Mission Mumbai: a Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets : A Novel of Sacred Cows, Snakes, and Stolen Toilets

School Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Gr 3-5-When budding photographer Dylan Thomas joins his best friend and fellow fantasy enthusiast Rohit Lal on a family vacation to India, he thinks he's in for an epic adventure. He is looking forward to the food, the photo ops, and the chance to escape his parents' bitter fighting. But Rohit feels differently. He misses the comfort of his adopted home of New York City and resents being dragged back to hot and uncomfortable Mumbai. Things go from bad to worse as Dylan becomes entangled in one disaster after another, as he attacks a sacred cow, dives into the sewage-littered Arabian Sea, and is sucked into the current of furious monsoon flood waters. Meanwhile, Rohit's villainous Aunt Boa is plotting to force Rohit to live with her in India.forever. And as a final insult, Dylan and Rohit's once-solid friendship is hanging by a rapidly fraying thread. At its best, this novel paints an uncompromising picture of the harsh realities of poverty and Western privilege and provides readers with a striking illustration of India's customs and cuisine. Both Dylan and Rohit are believable characters, and their mounting conflict will make sense to readers. But the book also falls victim to underdeveloped plot points and distracting clichés. Dylan's lonely home life and contentious relationship with his domineering father feels flat and uninteresting when compared to what's happening in India. Author Narsimhan's many allusions to fantasy novels may initially draw in her intended middle grade audience, but overly frequent similes try too hard ("Ro was as relentless as Voldemort and his constant attempts to kill Harry.") and quickly become annoying. VERDICT An uneven tale of the clash between East and West, this title may appeal to librarians in search of more realistic middle grade fiction about an underrepresented topic and those willing to see beyond its flaws.-Laura Lintz, Henrietta Public Library, Rochester, NY © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.