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WESTERN LANE by Chetna Maroo Kirkus Star

WESTERN LANE

by Chetna Maroo

Pub Date: Feb. 7th, 2023
ISBN: 978-0-374-60749-4
Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

A grieving family’s life is altered when they become obsessed with the game of squash.

Gopi is the youngest in a family of three daughters. Her sisters, Mona and Khush, are 15 and 13, respectively, and Gopi is just 11 when the novel opens. The girls’ mother has just died. When a relative tells Gopi’s father that he must find something for his daughters to do to keep them from running wild, Pa decides they should take up squash at Western Lane, the sports center near their home in England. All the girls train diligently, but only Gopi shows true talent. Pa begins to train her harder, finding her an opponent in 13-year-old Ged, the son of a Western Lane employee, and finding himself a friend in Ged’s mother. Gopi pushes herself harder and harder on the squash court, finding release in the repetition of drills and volleys. (“It was with a feeling of having been rescued that I raised my racket and served,” she remembers.) As Gopi disappears into her new identity as an athlete, the rest of her family members are struggling under the weight of their bereavement and the pressure to move forward with their lives under the watchful eyes of their relatives and their community. It is this pressure that threatens to crack the family apart forever. Maroo’s subtle and elegant writing at first seems surprisingly restrained for a novel about a subject as high-spirited and energetic as squash and from a narrator as generally high-spirited and energetic as an 11-year-old girl. But Gopi’s retrospective narration accumulates slow layers of heartbreak as the story proceeds, patiently building up an entire landscape of emotion through gestures, silences, and overheard murmurings in the dark.

A debut novel of immense poise and promise.