The Wedding by Gurjinder Basran

A novel exploring secrets and resentment set at a wedding.

Image | The Wedding by Gurjinder Basran

(Douglas and McIntyre)

Interweaving themes of identity, culture clashes, and the immigrant experience as found in The Namesake by Jhumpa Lahiri with the exuberance and sharp humour of Kevin Kwan's Crazy Rich Asians, Gurjinder Basran delivers a wide-ranging but intimate portrait of a vibrant, complex Sikh community.
Set in Vancouver and Surrey, B.C., The Wedding exposes the inner lives of the wedding party, guests and event staff in the lead-up to a lavish wedding. This novel, centered around the impending marriage of Devi and Baby, illustrates the union of two people, two families and all the ways in which an entire community bears witness, ensnares and uplifts itself.
Like all great Bollywood films, The Wedding is rife with family drama, steeped in tradition and an ode to love in all its forms. With humour, nuance and honesty, The Wedding spills the chai—exploring desire and expectation, suffering and judgment, class and race—all in search of a happy enough ever after. (From Douglas and McIntyre)
Gurjinder Basran is a writer living in Delta, B.C. Her novels include Everything Was Goodbye, the winner of the B.C. Book Prize and the Ethel Wilson Fiction Prize, Help! I'm Alive and Someone You Love is Gone.

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