Reviews

The Weight Loss Club by Devapriya Roy

bookerworm's review

Go to review page

hopeful medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

4.5

ini_ya's review

Go to review page

4.0

A very well written light read. It gets the atmosphere of a regular housing society in Kolkata very well. Many of the current social issues are well dealt with. Irrespective of whether you agree with the spiritual angle, the book reads well. I am definitely going to read this writer's first book now.

nirmalya's review

Go to review page

4.0

This was a really enjoyable read. A mostly well paced light read with relatable characters and situations, the book is often funny, occasionally touching and ultimately large hearted. Of all the popular fiction by the current generation of Indian writers that I've read, this is surely one of the best and certainly the gentlest. The first part was nothing short of brilliant.

The story brings together a number of quirky but believable characters who share an apartment. All of them have problems of their own, ranging from love troubles of a young teenager to the mother obsessed with her son's performance at school to one woman who is gradually losing all interest in life. Their problems escalate and appear to overwhelm the characters. But then a mysterious guest arrives at the apartment and helps everyone shed some spiritual weight. There are a several romantic sub plots, one of which I thought was really sweet.

Most of the characters come across like people you would know in real life, particularly if you've lived in Kolkata. In portraying such diverse characters with verisimilitude Roy shows herself to be a writer of some range. She also has a talent for poking fun at socially normative but hypocritical behaviour, which reminded me of the great Ashapurna Devi. Roy's portrayal of social life in a Kolkata apartment is perfectly done, and happily unlike most Bengali writers she doesn't confine herself to writing only about Bengali characters.

If the book has a fault, it is perhaps Roy trying to get inside the skin of too many different characters and situations. She undoubtedly has range, but I think the book could have shed some unessential weight - particularly the Sadhvi's backstory doesn't quite gel into the rest of the novel.

I also thought that it would have been a better novel if the residents of the apartment could have gotten together and helped solve each other's problems without help from the mysterious guest. There is also quite a bit about Reiki in the second half of the book - which I found interesting because I knew nothing of it - but again I think it would have been a better book if those bits weren't there.

But these minor quibbles apart, a very entertaining and broad hearted book, which will almost certainly make your day.






soniek's review

Go to review page

4.0

Simple, entertaining and gripping. It doesn't have a weak, cliched plot like many other books by contemporary Indian authors, the language, though simple isn't simplistic. And the colourful characters, the attention to the tiniest of details, frequent references to the various localities, language and cuisine of Calcutta is what makes this book an enjoyable read. Not to mention the description of the Puja itself, without which a book based in Calcutta and written by a Bengali author would have been incomplete.
More...