Thank you, Oprah!

Thank you, Oprah!

My husband says that I need to stop having my sentences trail off at the end because it sounds less confident.  I am working on it.  But it is nice to see this quality viewed as a virtue in this piece.  Thank you, Oprah.com.  Very touched by your lovely review.
Yes, I am “self deprecating” and yes, I aim to be more confident.

These thoughtful, gripping reads are as transporting as a weeklong vacation.

In this joyful memoir, Shoba Narayan moves from New York to Bangalore, India, where she was born but hasn’t lived as an adult. There, outside her new apartment, she encounters the milk lady, a vendor who plies her with creamy treats from a local cow. The pasteurized, homogenized milk that Narayan formerly drank soon becomes a symbol for the Western world that she’s left behind, and the fresh local milk, a symbol of India and the misgivings Narayan feels about embracing her heritage and history. “The reason I want to buy milk from a cow is because I am trying to recapture the simple times of my childhood,” she writes. Although readers may find her analysis of Indian society illuminating and enjoy her breakdown of what makes a white, red, gold or smoke-colored cow worth appreciating, the real reason you’ll love this book is the author herself: a woman so curious, funny and self-deprecating that she is able to show us—delightfully—how the past informs our future.

— Kerri Arsenault

The Milk Lady of Bangalore: An Unexpected Adventure
272 pages; Algonquin Book
Available at:
Amazon.com | Barnes & Noble | iBooks | IndieBound

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About the Author:

Shoba Narayan is an award-winning Indian travel writer, author, and freelance journalist based in Bangalore, India. She writes about luxury travel, food, wine, hotels, culture, and spirituality across Asia, and has contributed travel features to Condé Nast Traveler (US edition), Travel & Leisure, DestinAsian, Mint Lounge, The National (Abu Dhabi), Taj Magazine, and Hindustan Times, among others. Her travel writing spans India, Southeast Asia, Japan, China, the Maldives, Bhutan, Costa Rica, and beyond — always with a focus on the sensory, the cultural, and the deeply human.

One Comment

  1. beginswithmesite February 9, 2018 at 12:16 pm - Reply

    This is fabulous. Many congratulations. Wishing you the best to keep making strides.
    Warm regards Resha
    >

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