Share this title
Bloodline Bandra
₹ 350.00 inclusive of all taxes
- Or from your local bookseller.
Warning: Undefined variable $productid in /var/www/html/harper_staging/wp-content/themes/harpercollins/woocommerce/content-single-product.php on line 399
Warning: Undefined variable $productid in /var/www/html/harper_staging/wp-content/themes/harpercollins/woocommerce/content-single-product.php on line 407
About the book
David Cabral is a journalist, and also one of the original peepils: an East Indian from Pali Village. The village is a world unto itself, and the villagers such notables as Salt Peter, Freddy Fakir, Basco Big Stomach, Carla Four Eyes, Lorna Leg Spread, Spunkless Joe and Small Tree Big Fruit. It is a world relatively untroubled by the rapid changes around it, mostly because its inhabitants just ask themselves, ‘My fadder wot going?’David, spurred by the sight of childhood friends who have made it big abroad, manages to shake off the stupor of his comfortable life and heads to New York for his piece of the American Dream pie. There, he finds himself a slave: unable to scrape together enough money to return to India, nor able to quit because it would render his stay illegal. There also, he meets and falls in love with Japanese cello student Hatsumi Nakamura – a difficult love, bound by culture and circumstances.All the while, Pali Village beckons David home.Bloodline Bandra captures with flair and wit the flavourful language of the East Indians, life in the tight-knit community of Pali Village and a way of life that’s dying out. It is a riveting tale of love and loss, of home and homelessness that will linger on long after the book is read and put away.
Pages: 264
Available in: Paperback
Language: English
TAGS
Godfrey Joseph Pereira
Godfrey Joseph Pereira was born in Pali Village, Bandra, Bombay. He was the assistant editor, Society magazine, Sunday magazine and India Today. Pereira also covered the first Gulf War from Israel. Several years later, he migrated to the United States, and worked as a reporter/writer with News India, India Abroad and India Monitor in New York City. Godfrey currently works as events director at the Monroe Center for the Arts in Hoboken, New Jersey.