Resources for Families with Adopted Children
For Boarding Schools Specializing in Adoption Issues, Call 866.561.7327

Novel Explores Secret Adoption's Impact on Two Families

In her new novel, Secret Daughter, writer Shilpi Somaya Gowda touches on topics that will likely be of interest to many members of adoptive families.

According to a Mreview by Lisa Orkin Emmanuel of the Associated Press, Secret Daughter involves a clandestine international adoption, and the impact that it has on two families:

Boys are the prized possession in the Indian village where Kavita Merchant gives birth to a daughter. She loves this child and cannot bear to have her husband, Jasu, leave her to die, as he did with their first girl.

In secret, she names her Usha, or dawn, and painstakingly makes her way from her village to then-Bombay when the baby is just 3 days old. She leaves the child at an orphanage, and every day for the rest of her life, she lives with the pain of her decision. For Kavita, it was the only way to save the girl.

The child is renamed Asha, meaning hope, and adopted by a couple -- an Indian man and his American wife -- who live in California. Krishnan and Somer Thakkar are both doctors. Slowly, Somer begins to realize what it means to be a mother, about the small and large sacrifices. Her child doesn't look like her, and Somer worries that she will one day lose Asha to her native land.

The relationship between the couple begins to unravel as Somer refuses to accept the Indian culture, rarely visiting her husband's family. This also strains her relationship with Asha.

Labels: international, fiction

Posted By: Aspen/CRC

Comments:

Chelsea on 1/27/2011
This sounds like an interesting book. It covers subjects you don't see in a lot of books.