Himalayan Dhaba
by Craig Joseph Danner
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Description
"In a remote Himalayan village, a widowed American doctor searches for the ghost of her husband, an injured traveler is kidnapped, and the waiter in the local dhaba finds love when he leasts expects it"--Back cover.Tags
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Member Reviews
Not even 25 pages into this book, I was on Google Earth searching for the towns and landmarks mentioned within. It is based on real places, and it is hard to believe the characters are not real as well. Summaries suggest that the protagonist is a doctor named Mary who leaves her life behind in the United States; however, I feel that the real protagonist is the small, unnamed Himalayan town loosely based on the real town of Manali in Himachal Pradesh. Mary is a central figure but so is Amod, the waiter, Meena, a struggling young woman, Philip, an injured tourist, Ravi, a surgical patient, Tamding, a hospital employee, Antone, an opioid addict, and Kali, a stray dog.
It is a rare author who can create morally gray, imperfect characters show more that the reader still cares about. I was even concerned for the "villian" of the story.
Also, I did not find this to be one of those stories where a Westerner goes to India to "find themselves". Mary went to India because she had no other place to be. She does struggle with her purpose there, but Himalayan Dhaba lacks the preachiness, predictability, and somewhat racist stereotypes of those other tales.
Overall, it was an enjoyable read.
Notice: the story depicts sexual assault, violence, surgical procedures, and tragic deaths-- It is not overly graphic, however, but I feel is included to show real life in the area for better or worse. show less
It is a rare author who can create morally gray, imperfect characters show more that the reader still cares about. I was even concerned for the "villian" of the story.
Also, I did not find this to be one of those stories where a Westerner goes to India to "find themselves". Mary went to India because she had no other place to be. She does struggle with her purpose there, but Himalayan Dhaba lacks the preachiness, predictability, and somewhat racist stereotypes of those other tales.
Overall, it was an enjoyable read.
Notice: the story depicts sexual assault, violence, surgical procedures, and tragic deaths-- It is not overly graphic, however, but I feel is included to show real life in the area for better or worse. show less
A newly-widowed woman physician goes to the small Himalayan town her husband loved, and works in thier hospital. Spiritual and humanistic, with good picture of life in this mountain village, and a lively plot.
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All Things India
95 works; 21 members
Author Information
2 Works 103 Members
Awards and Honors
Common Knowledge
- Important places
- Himachal Pradesh, India
- First words
- She's waiting out a sudden shower of fifty kilo bags of rice, a gathered clutch of angry chickens flapping like their heads are off.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Hello," he says in a British clip, "I think my neck is better now."
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- Members
- 98
- Popularity
- 328,820
- Reviews
- 2
- Rating
- (3.59)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper
- ISBNs
- 3
- ASINs
- 1
























































