For a moment I thought I would give this book four stars and not five, probably because despite its qualities, I felt a sense of unease at some of its contents. Then I realised it would hardly be fair. The quality of the prose in itself, the excellent portrayal of the many characters really deserved five stars even though I will never be able to say it is a book I loved, rather, I will say that it is an excellent book I read. To sum up very briefly an Anglo Indian 12-year-old finds himself in a small town in the USA in the 50's, left with his uncle's girlfriend when another uncle and aunt who had given him shelter but no love or support whatsoever decide they can't stand the sight of him anymore. Rajiv has to adapt to a small narrow-minded community (but not worse than what he left behind in England)and makes new friends whose lives he will deeply influence.
I loved the way in which the author made all his characters so alive and real , it might be a slight pity that so many of them are, to say the least, weird.There's Salvatore, a cowardly and foul-mouthed Italian shopkeeper, his bored and depressed Polish wife and their lovely daughter Annie,who has to bear more than her fair share of trouble,there's frightening reverend Hewitt ,his unloved and sour wife and their mentally disturbed son,there's Nora 's father as creepy as can be, pouncing on his mature-looking growing daughter whenever he has a chance to see her naked and many more variations. It is undeniably cleverly crafted and grips you until the end. It is also very cruel and sometimes unsettling.