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Summary
Summary
A modern retelling of a romantic Indian legend, 96 Words for Love is a star-crossed love story perfect for fans of The Sun is Also a Star and When Dimple Met Rishi .
Ever since her acceptance to UCLA, 17-year-old Raya Liston has been quietly freaking out. She feels simultaneously lost and trapped by a future already mapped out for her.
Then her beloved grandmother dies, and Raya jumps at the chance to spend her last free summer at the ashram in India where her grandmother met and fell in love with her grandfather. Raya hopes to find her center and her true path. But she didn't expect to fall in love... with a country of beautiful contradictions, her fiercely loyal cousin, a local girl with a passion for reading, and a boy who teaches her that in Sanskrit, there are 96 different ways to say the word "love."
"This book is a feast for your soul." --Deepak Chopra
Author Notes
Rachel Roy is the daughter of an Indian immigrant father and Dutch mother. She is mother to Tallulah and Ava. Rachel is the founder & creative director of her eponymous brand and a tireless activist for using your voice to cultivate change in the world and to design the life you wish to live. Rachel founded Kindness Is Always Fashionable, an entrepreneurial philanthropic platform to help women artisans around the world create sustainable income for their families and communities. In 2018 Rachel was named a United Nations Women Champion for Innovation, and works for the UN advocating gender equality and other critical women's issues. In 2015, Rachel published, Design Your Life.
Ava Dash is the daughter of fashion designer Rachel Roy. She attends college, works and lives in Los Angeles. Ava works with young adults that have aged out of the foster care system as well as former sex trafficked girls in India. Inspired from her travels with her mother, Ava hopes to start a give back business that provides critical resources to educate and empower the girls she has met on her travels to India.
Reviews (5)
School Library Journal Review
Gr 10 Up-After being accepted to UCLA, Raya starts to wonder if that is where her true passion lies. Right before her beloved Daadee passes away, she tells Raya that she has left something for her and her cousin Anandi at the Rishi Kanva ashram in the Himalayas she had stayed at in her youth. Raya decides that this is her opportunity to find herself and who she is meant to be, so the teen convinces her parents to allow her to live at the ashram with her cousin for a month. While solving her Daadee's mystery, she meets Kiran, a boy she desperately doesn't want to fall for on her journey to self-discovery, but does, and she meets a slew of other people who change her for the better. All of the characters in this story are well fleshed out with their own internal conflicts. Throughout, readers are also told the story Shakuntala and Dushyanta and how their love story parallels what both Raya and her Daadee have experienced. This is a readable, relatable story that touches upon social justice issues, such as sex trafficking, which at times feel like vehicles in place only to move the love story along. VERDICT A general purchase for libraries looking for romantic coming-of-age stories with depth.-Kristyn -Dorfman, The Nightingale-Bamford School, New York City © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Publisher's Weekly Review
On her deathbed, Raya's grandmother, Daadee, tells her that she's left things that Raya and her cousin Anandi should have at a remote ashram in India, which Daadee visited in her own youth. Worried about her future and confused by her anxiety about being accepted to UCLA, Raya travels to the ashram with Anandi, hoping to find personal clarity and locate whatever Daadee left behind. At the ashram, direction comes when Raya finds two of Daadee's adolescent journals and falls in love with Kiran, a budding filmmaker from Delhi. Loosely retelling the Indian story of Shakuntala, both Daadee, through journal entries, and Raya, through her first-person narration, draw parallels to their own lives, struggling to find balance between their goals and the sacrifices that their newfound romantic entanglements would require. Well-known designer Roy and daughter Dash write in a pop culture-laden conversational tone to convey Raya's concerns-stress about going to college and declaring a major, curiosity about sex and a future with Kiran. Though her feelings are portrayed as valid and relevant, the book's too-quick pace leaves them underexplored and too quickly resolved, making the overall message about trusting one's individual journey unsatisfying. Ages 13-up. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Kirkus Review
When Raya Liston spends a month at an ashram in India, she doesn't just find herself: She also finds true love.Seventeen-year-old Raya has a plan: major in English at UCLA and make her Indian mother and biracial (half black, other half unspecified) father proud. Spending the summer after high school at the Rishi Kanva ashram in the Himalayas with her cousin Anandi is definitely not the planuntil she receives a phone call from her dying grandmother, Daadee, saying she's left something important for Raya and Anandi hidden on the ashram grounds. Against her better judgment, Raya leaves for the ashram, where she unexpectedly falls in love with Kiran, a budding filmmaker who breaks rules as passionately as Raya follows them. In the process of falling in love and uncovering the secrets Daadee left, Raya realizes that the real question is not what she wants to do but who she wants to be. An insightful, layered feminist retelling of the Hindu myth "Shaktunala," the book features a diverse cast of characters who grapple with equally diverse issues in a richly drawn setting. Raya's candor and self-reflection infuse the narration with the perfect balance of insight and momentum. Her relationship with her family is particularly refreshing: Unlike in most books about diaspora, Raya's Indian relatives support her, guiding her through conflict rather than creating it.A beautifully crafted, truly feminist coming-of-age story featuring nuanced characters in a unique setting. (Romance. 14-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Review
Raya Liston has been accepted by UCLA, her dream school, but she's not happy; she's terrified. She has no clue what she wants to study or do with her life. In the midst of all this stress, Daadee, her grandmother living in India, dies, but not before she tells Raya that she left something for her and Raya's cousin Anandi at the ashram where she once lived and which she revisited but she doesn't remember what that something is. Raya and Anandi make plans to visit the ashram for a month, and Raya hopes for, if not enlightenment, at least some direction. There is, however, a distraction in the form of Kirin, a boy Raya's age who challenges her. Raya, the first-person narrator, is appealing, funny, and authentic. She has a fresh lively voice and plays off her well-defined co-characters, Anandi, Kirin, and Devin, a clueless Englishwoman who doesn't seem to understand the purpose of an ashram. A subplot concerning human trafficking feels undeveloped, but the star of the novel is Raya's remarkable voice.--Donna Scanlon Copyright 2019 Booklist
Library Journal Review
There are 96 Sanskrit words to describe the word "love," and while Raya is not looking for love at an ashram in India, she finds a romantic partner as well as her calling in life. In this retelling of the Shakuntala and Dushyanta love story, Raya decides to spend the summer before college at the ashram in India where her grandparents met and fell in love. This is an appealing love story with a lot of heart. Narrator Soneela Nankani does an admirable job of characterizing a diverse cast that includes American, Indian, British, and Australian characters. VERDICT This is an additional purchase where YA romances are popular.--Jodeana Kruse, R.A. Long High School, Longview, WA