Serena Singh Flips the Script
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“Sonya Lalli’s savvy novel puts relationships in all of their forms–family, friends, and romance–on even footing as a young woman works to find happiness.”–Shelf Awareness
Serena Singh is tired of everyone telling her what she should want–and she is ready to prove to her mother, her sister, and the aunties in her community that a woman does not need domestic bliss to have a happy life.
Things are going according to plan for Serena. She’s smart, confident, and just got a kick-ass new job at a top advertising firm in Washington, D.C. Even before her younger sister gets married in a big, traditional wedding, Serena knows her own dreams don’t include marriage or children. But with her mother constantly encouraging her to be more like her sister, Serena can’t understand why her parents refuse to recognize that she and her sister want completely different experiences out of life.
A new friendship with her co-worker, Ainsley, comes as a breath of fresh air, challenging Serena’s long-held beliefs about the importance of self-reliance. She’s been so focused on career success that she’s let all of her hobbies and close friendships fall by the wayside. As Serena reconnects with her family and friends–including her ex-boyfriend–she learns letting people in can make her happier than standing all on her own.Praise for Serena Singh Flips the Script
“Sonya Lalli’s charming novel explores how our relationships define us. Through honesty, humor, and vulnerability, Serena Singh reminds us that new, fulfilling connections are possible at any age. This equal parts relatable and entertaining story is a delight from start to finish!”—Saumya Dave, author of Well-Behaved Indian Women
“Heartfelt and forthright, Lalli’s culturally rich work of women’s fiction is exceptional.”—Booklist (starred)
Praise for Sonya Lalli
“From yoga studios to finding oneself in trips abroad to online dating, Lalli gives readers a wonderful novel about love and belonging and meaning of happiness and home.”–Soniah Kamal, award-winning author of Unmarriageable: Pride and Prejudice in Pakistan
“Anu’s struggle to find herself is wrought with obstacles and sometimes frustrating, but the resolution of her story is both satisfying and realistic. A moving look at one woman’s journey between her family and her desire for independence.”–Kirkus
“Sonya Lalli offers up a tale of familial pressures, cultural traditions, and self-discovery, that is equal turns heartbreaking and hilarious…Lalli tears down stereotypes with humor and warmth.”– Entertainment Weekly
“An engaging love story that delivers on the promise of true love forever…The Matchmaker’s List comes through in spades (and hearts).”–NPR
“Lalli’s sharp-eyed tale of cross-cultural dating, family heartbreak, the strictures of culture, and the exuberance of love is both universal and timeless.”–Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Bright and vivid, and fresh and funny–I was utterly charmed by this insight into Raina’s struggle to be the perfect Indian daughter. A delightful debut.”–Veronica Henry, author of How to Find Love in a Bookshop
“A riotous odyssey into the pressures of cross-cultural modern dating that will chime with every 20-something singleton”–ELLE (UK)
“A funny and moving exploration of modern love.”–Balli Kaur Jaswal, author of Erotic Stories for Punjabi Widows (A Reese Witherspoon Book Club Pick)
“Absolutely charming.”–Woman’s Day
“A warm and refreshing look at cultural identity, unexpected romance, and unbreakable family bonds.”–Kirkus
“Lalli’s debut is a delightful, multicultural romantic comedy full of humorous banter and loads of life lessons about family, happiness, love, honesty, and acceptance.”–Booklist (starred review)
“A knockout romantic comedy debut.”–Washington Independent Review of BooksSonya Lalli is a romance and women’s fiction author of Punjabi and Bengali heritage. Her books have been featured in Entertainment Weekly, NPR, Washington Post, Glamour and more. She lives in Vancouver with her husband.Readers Guide for SERENA SINGH FLIPS HER SCRIPT
by Sonya Lalli
1. At the outset, Serena has a strained relationship with her mother, Sandeep. Why do you think that is, and what motivates her to try and mend it?
2. Becket introduces Serena to the idea that she should go online and make proactive choices to find new friends. Why do you think Serena resists at first? Have you ever put yourself out there in a bid to make new friendships, and what was that experience like?
3. Why do you think Serena created ground rules for her friendship with Jesse? Do you think it’s possible to stay friends with an ex without crossing any lines?
4. Serena’s budding friendship with Ainsley forces Serena to realize that she stopped putting in the effort with her friends as everyone grew up and shifted to different stages of their lives. Why do you think she didn’t realize her efforts were lagging, and why is it harder to maintain and form new friendships as adults?
5. Serena and Sandeep often feel like they do not understand each other, and Sandeep worries that by choosing to raise her children in America rather than India, she and her daughter will never truly understand each other. Do you think this is true?
6. During their breakup, Serena suggests to Becket that although he cared about her, he didn’t really want to settle down with her and just felt pressured to because he was getting “older.” Did that seem true to you? Why do you think both Serena and Becket stayed in that relationship for so long?
7. Serena and Ainsley become close friends very quickly, sharing everything from work lunches to family dinners to spontaneous poetry readings. What do you think draws them to the other person? Do you think the blossoming of a new friendship can be like the start of a romance, and if so, why?
8. Serena and Ainsley have their first big fight when Ainsley tells Serena she’s “closed off.” Why do you think Serena is the way she is? What barriers must she overcome to truly open herself up to a future that has room for true romantic love?
9. Sandeep tells Serena that “it’s OK to love the people who have hurt you.” Discuss how this applies to the relationships between the characters in the book.
10. Towards the end, Serena wonders if she would still have accomplished all of her career goals and become the same woman she is today if she had married Jesse twelve years earlier. What do you think?
11. Serena ultimately welcomes Natasha back into her life, accepting that not every relationship can be a “two-way street.” Have you ever been in this position and faced this kind of choice with a good friend or a family member?
1
Is it Singh Time, beti?”
Slowly, I craned my neck to the side. Uncle Singh, one of the many Uncle Singhs in our community, was towering over me. I’d been making eyes again with the hot photographer, whose name I kept forgetting, and hadn’t noticed the uncle make his approach.
“Singh time?” I asked, feigning ignorance as I stood up from my chair and stalled for time.
“It is time to sing, hah?”
Party hosts in our community knew to allot one, even two hours for Singh Time, during which various uncles took over the microphone and serenaded the room with their off-key renditions of Punjabi folk songs. But my baby sister, Natasha, who had married a white guy and had mainly non-Indian guests at her wedding that night, had given me strict instructions to withhold the microphone “by any means necessary.”
I snuck a glance to my right, down the length of the head table. She was sitting happily next to Mark in her bedazzled gold lengha, flanked by both sets of parents, and then the wedding party. I had been mildly disappointed when Natasha asked the two other bridesmaids, her closest childhood friends, to give the toast to the bride instead of me, but I suppose she needed me up here as MC to fend off the uncles.
“Where is microphone?” I heard Uncle Singh ask. I turned back, beaming at him as a lightbulb went off in my head.
“Uncle,” I whispered, as if I had gossip to share. “Natasha specifically asked me not to let you sing tonight.”
He gasped, and I squeezed his hands in my own.
“Because she has something more special in mind for you.”
He narrowed his brows, the two thick bushes above his eyes merging into one long one.
“You, Uncle Singh, are her most favorite uncle.”
“I am?”
“Have you not always felt a special bond with our family? With our sweet little Natasha?”
He glanced over at her curiously. Even though we shared the same, extremely common surname, we weren’t related to this Uncle Singh. To be completely honest, our families didn’t even know each other that well, and if Natasha wasn’t dressed up like a bride, I doubt the uncle would have been able to pick her out of a lineup. But if fourteen years in advertising had taught me anything, it’s that Uncle Singh didn’t want the microphone to sing. No. He wanted the microphone to feel admired, even loved.
And that’s all the information I needed to make the sale.
Within minutes, I’d convinced Uncle Singh that it was tradition for the bride’s favorite uncle to ask her to dance during the reception and that she’d be waiting for him after the DJ started later that evening. (Thankfully, he didn’t grill me too much on the alleged custom, accepting my answer that it was something goray-white people-liked to do.)
It was just before nine p.m. by the time he returned to his seat, and according to the Google spreadsheet Natasha, by the time her treat of a mother-in-law, Mrs. Hartshorne, and their team of organizers had prepared, it was nearly time for me to make the introductions for the final round of toasts. I grabbed the microphone from where it was hidden in my purse, not wanting to wait a moment longer in case another uncle or auntie cornered me, and walked up to the podium, my heart beating in my stomach.
It’s not that I was nervous. Far from it. I loved public speaking, and I was good at it, too. But presenting a pithy, original advertising campaign to get a client on board with the idea, and then consumers on board with the product, was very different than MCing your baby sister’s wedding.
Your baby sister’s Indian wedding.
I surveyed the room as I gathered the courage to start. Everyone seemed to be having a good time, chatting and laughing, shoveling in forkfuls of the chocolate lavender wedding cake Natasha and I had spent hours picking out. And the room was gorgeous. We’d decorated it to be the exact winter wonderland Natasha had imagined.
But it was strange to see the room divided into brown and white-except for the four or five tables closest to the bar full of Natasha and Mark’s friends, beautiful people in a rainbow of ethnicities that would have been perfect as extras on the sportswear campaign I’d been working on all winter.
Up near the front sat Mark’s family and his parents’ friends-the stuffiest, most highbrow residents of Washington, DC, or Bethesda of the “old money” variety, including one senator, two House representatives, and three directors of one federal agency or another. (I knew this because Mrs. Hartshorne had demanded I give them a “warm welcome” yet said we didn’t have time to thank all of our relatives who flew in from the UK and India.) Most of the men were in tuxedos, and the women in gowns-although their diamonds, pearls, and general decadence didn’t outshine the sparkle coming from the back of the room, where our extended family and community was seated. The uncles were in kurtas or western suits, the aunties in saris or salwars in true gilded Punjabi glamour.
A group of particularly glitzy aunties caught my eye halfway toward the back. They were gawking at me, and even from here I could see the pity on their faces. I tried not to roll my eyes, imagining what they were saying about me whenever I was out of earshot.
Already thirty-six, and to have a younger sister married first?
What ever happened to that nice boy Jesse? Did she scare him off?
She is not too old yet, nah? My cousin’s nephew has a job now. I will make the arrangements!
“Now that is what I call butter chicken,” I said loudly into the microphone, cutting off their voices in my head. The whole room laughed. I’m not sure at what exactly.
“I hope everyone’s having a wonderful time!”
A table near the bar cheered and clinked their glasses, and I gritted my teeth as the rest of the room joined in, and Natasha and Mark stood up for a chaste, tasteful kiss for their fans.
My chest ached, but I wasn’t jealous, even though it would be easy to think as much.
I was genuinely, wholeheartedly happy that she had found someone to spend her life with.
I was also happy that one of the Singh sisters was finally married, checking off the “good Indian girl” box, which meant I didn’t have to.
***
Five hours later, I found myself in the happy coupleÕs honeymoon suite, trapped on a sectional between Natasha and one of her giggly friends. I yawned, hiding it with my palm. Natasha had assigned me with last-minute wedding tasks that week because she didnÕt fully trust the planner, and I was exhausted, but I knew it would look bad if I left early. Leaning forward, I checked to see if there was anyone else I could talk to. The groomsmen were pouring another round of tequila shots in the kitchen. They were nice enough guys, all thirtysomethings with fancy jobs in government or law or medicine, but they drank like fish whenever they were off the clock. I turned my head toward the deluxe king-size bed, on top of which Mark and his sister, Bethany, and a handful of their friends were dancing up a storm. Their shoes were still on, and I felt even more exhausted just watching them.
I sighed silently, sinking back into the couch. Just a few more hours, and I could crawl into bed, close my eyes, and the wedding would be over.
Finally.
Today had felt like a long, long time coming, if only because Mom had been fantasizing about it since the day Natasha brought Mark home.
Do you think he’ll propose, Serena?
Do you think they’ll have a Sikh ceremony, Serena?
Do you think your sister will pick the red jai malas, Serena?
I’d been fielding these sorts of panicked, overexcited calls for years, but I didn’t mind in the slightest. As much as Mom adored her new son-in-law, I freaking loved having him around. Not only had Mark proven to be a great buffer at tense family dinners, but ever since he entered the picture, Mom had stopped hounding me about the fact that I wasn’t married.
I glanced around the room at Natasha and Mark’s friends, suddenly nostalgic for my own group, whom I’d hung out with every single day from grade school to high school graduation. We’d been like this once. Big groups of us sitting around, dancing, telling one another the same old stories that had defined our friendships, built their foundations. But things were different now that we were older.
Just a few years ago, I could count on scores of dynamic, caring women in my life, from school or college or whom I’d met at work. But one by one, they’d gotten married and had families. And one by one, their commitments to our friendship took a backseat. Our movie nights, weekly phone calls, or Saturday dinners became less and less frequent, morphed into forty-five-minute catch-ups at a Starbucks near their apartments, when their spouses were at the gym or out of town. They’d forget my birthday or to ask me about the new client I’d scored, but they’d text to remind me I still hadn’t RSVP’d for their baby showers or housewarmings an hour and a half away in suburbia.
Most of them kept their careers after having children, so it was understandable that they never had time for their single friends in the city. That those few precious moments between working and commuting, bath time and story time, were dedicated to their partner, their hobbies, their own mental health.
I wasn’t a robot. They were my friends, and I got it. But I didn’t have to like it, and I was certainly allowed to resent it.
“You awake?” I heard Natasha ask me, and a split second later she elbowed me in the ribs. “Are you ever going to tell me why I had to dance with that random uncle to ‘Mundian to Bach Ke’?”
I started to explain to her the Singh Time situation, but then she grabbed my shoulder and cut me off.
“Look who it is!”
I followed her eyes through the crowd toward the front door of the suite. It was the photographer I’d been flirting with the whole day. Suddenly, I didn’t feel so sleepy.
“I told him to drop by.” Natasha shrugged nonchalantly. “I wonder why he came.”
“Free booze?” I ventured.
“I saw you two chatting today. A lot.”
“Like when?”
“Like, right before the ceremony. The cocktail hour. The reception. Becket is so into you!”
Becket. So that was his name.
He hadn’t seen us yet, and I watched him hover awkwardly in the kitchen and shake hands with the groomsmen, and then obligingly down a tequila shot. He was wearing a checked shirt and tie beneath his suit, and his black hair-which I’d noticed earlier had a few grays, too-swooped adorably across his forehead, like a surfer.
“Go talk to him.”
I shook my head, even though I couldn’t stop smiling. It had been a while since I’d felt attracted to someone like this-eight months or so, the UN Swahili translator I’d briefly dated-and the thrill of something new sent a shiver up my spine.
I knocked my knee against Natasha, in thanks. She was shameless, but she was also my best friend. I mean, she noticed who I was giving the eyes to on her own wedding day. Maybe I didn’t need my other friends. Maybe it didn’t matter if everyone else in my life had started to drift away.
“Serena, if you don’t go over there-“
“Chill, OK?” I caught her eye, and she made a face at me. “Please don’t make this awk . . .”
I trailed off as I suddenly realized that Becket had left the kitchen. He was standing in front of us.
“Hey,” he said, his hands in his pockets.
I was about to speak when Natasha intervened.
“Becket!” she squealed, standing up. “I’m so glad you came. You’ve met my big sister, haven’t you?” She pushed him into her spot on the couch, and I felt his thigh rub against mine as he sat down.
“Can I get you a drink?” she asked him.
“Sure. I’ll-“
“No, don’t move.” She shook her head furiously, took a swig from her beer, and then pressed the bottle into his hand. “Here. Take mine.”
You call that chill, Natasha?
Becket smiled at the half-drunk bottle of beer. He took a sip, catching my eye just as he raised the bottle into the air, and we held each other’s gazes as Natasha and her giggly friend disappeared into the background.
“So what’s your story?” I asked, after they’d left. We were the only ones left on the couch.
He finished swallowing and brought his beer back down to his lap. “Do you want the abridged version or the full monty?”
“The full monty.”
When you get to a certain age, when you’ve dated a certain number of people, you learn how to cut to the chase.
“The full monty,” he repeated, sighing through a smile. “Do you have time? This might take all night.”
God, he was flirty, but there’s nothing I liked more than some innuendo.
By the end of the evening, we’d learned where each other had gone to school, what neighborhood the other lived in, and where the other worked. (Or in my case, was about to start work.) He’d set his hand on my knee, and when I walked him to his Lyft, he grazed my ear with his lips as he whispered in my ear.
Lightly, I kissed him, and it didn’t matter what the kiss meant or what he had whispered. It didn’t matter that we were both thirty-six, and if this-whatever this was with Becket-lasted six more minutes, months, or even years. Because the truth was, for me, dating was just that. Dating.
I didn’t want to have a family. I didn’t want to catch myself a husband #lovehim #blessed.
I just wished people believed me.
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Dimensions | 0.8900 × 5.4400 × 8.2000 in |
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Subjects | gifts for her, women's fiction, book club, love story, gifts for women, fashion, literary fiction, books for women, contemporary fiction, contemporary romance, relationship books, chick lit, FIC027230, fiction books, books fiction, romance novels, women gifts, realistic fiction books, mom books, summer books for women, interracial romance, FIC045000, women, divorce, marriage, relationship, relationships, family, modern, romance, love, drama, england, motherhood, fiction, Friendship, families, romance books, romantic, book club books, Sisters, novels |