A
Wicked Old Woman by Ravinder Randhawa
A Wicked Old Woman was my first novel, and like many first novels, it
came out as a richly packed, multi-layered cake, full of the shifting glitter
of emotions, hopes and feelings, and the turbulent mix of family, cultures and
conflicts.
The beauty and pleasure of books is
their infinite variety. Some are about
one overarching idea whilst others are like slices of life, but all are
infused, filtered and imbued by that strange thing we call imagination. A Wicked Old Woman has several themes but is strongly about women trying to
define their lives, about families trying to find their feet in a new country
and culture, and about the history and secrets we all carry.
The main character is Kulwant, at a crossroads
in her life, who decides to subvert everything and initiates a masquerade,
which turns out to be more catalyst than disguise, more dynamic than passive,
more transformative than defensive. Sparking fireworks among the diverse people
who collide and converge, and who ultimately come together to help a young
Asian woman, who’s killed a man...
The recent, tragic events in Paris,
Beirut and Bagdad, which make us shiver with horror and sympathy, were
perpetrated by people who think violence and bloodshed are justifiable. I was
reminded of a section in A Wicked Old
Woman, not because it’s about violence, but because it’s about a real group
of women who worked for peace, The Greenham Women. In the novel, Ammi, one of
the characters, keeps having nightmares about people exploding – meaning people
being bombed. The thing about Ammi’s nightmares is they won’t go away until
something’s been done about them. So a campaign is launched to do something to
support the women at the Greenham Peace Camp, which includes a rather amusing
samosa making session.
The Greenham Women’s Peace Camp, which
lasted for 19 years, was one of the longest lasting peace camps in the world,
its members enduring great hardship and tough conditions. It was set up to challenge by debate, the storing of 96 Cruise
nuclear missiles at Greenham Common. When the women first arrived at the Common
they delivered a letter to the base commander, putting forward their demands
and said: ‘We fear for the future of all our children
and for the future of the living world which is the basis of all life’.
What impresses me most about
the Greenham Women is that they only used peaceful means, they challenged by
words, by talk, by debate, and they
were concerned about the future of the whole world. I think it’s time to start thinking globally, to tell our
governments and politicians we want them to start developing peaceful means of
resolving conflicts. It’ll be a long, hard and rocky road, but just look at
this year’s Nobel Peace Prize winners, The Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet.
They don’t have the word Dialogue in their name for nothing.
I’ve been surprised at
how many current issues and topics are echoed in A Wicked Old Woman: from young women growing up in different
cultures and trying to make sense of it all, to feminism and what that might
mean, to the heartbreak of becoming a refugee. As well as the eternal stuff we
all have to grapple with: love, loss, and dilemmas.
I hope you’ll enjoy
reading A Wicked Old Woman, as much
as I loved writing it.
Summary:
Drama.
Masquerade. Mischief.
A sharply
observed, witty and confident novel. Linguistically playful, entertaining and
provoking.
In a
bustling British city, Kulwant
mischievously masquerades as a much older woman, using her walking stick like a
Greek chorus, ‘…stick-leg-shuffle-leg-shuffle…’ encountering new adventures and
getting bruised by the jagged edges of her life. There’s the Punjabi punk who
rescues her after a carefully calculated fall; Caroline, her gregarious friend
from school days, who watched over her dizzy romance with ‘Michael the
Archangel’, Maya the myopic who can’t see beyond her broken heart and
Rani/Rosalind, who’s just killed a man …
Vividly
bringing to life a bit of the 60s, 70s and 80s.
Information about the book
Title: A
Wicked Old Woman
Author:
Ravinder Randhawa
Genre: Contemporary
Publisher: Matador
Format: Paperback
& Ebook
Published: October
24th 2015 (republished)
Author Information
Ravinder Randhawa is the acclaimed author of the
novels Beauty and the Beast (YA), A Wicked Old Woman, The
Tiger’s Smile and the short story collection Dynamite.
She’s currently working on a trilogy: The Fire-Magician. Ravinder
was a Royal Literary Fund Fellow at Toynbee Hall, Queen Mary’s University, the
University of London, and founded the Asian Women Writer’s Collective.
Ravinder was born in India, grew up in leafy
Warwickshire, now lives in London and agrees with Samuel Johnson’s saying
(though of course, in a gender non-specific way) ‘…if a man is tired of London,
he is tired of life.’ Loves good coffee and really good thrillers.
Author Links
Tour
Schedule
Monday
23rd November
Tuesday
24th November
Wednesday
25th November
Thursday
26th November
Friday
27th November
Saturday
28th November
Sunday
29th November
Monday
30th November
Tuesday
1st December
Wednesday
2nd December
Thursday
3rd December
Friday
4th December
Saturday
5th December
Sunday
6th December
Hello Guys!! I am Belinda. I live in Chicago USA. I am very excited today and do not know where to start my testimony from. I was a poor woman with 3 kids and find it difficult to pay my bills and feed my kids.My husband left me and the kids for another woman and ever since then we were living in pain and hunger but just few days ago i came across a testimony of a man who got a blank ATM card from Mr.Alexander so i immediately contacted him for the same type of ATM card and i am very happy to announce to the world that i am living a fulfilled life. This blank ATM card can withdraw up to 10,000 dollars and more daily without you having any account with any bank. I have been able to buy a house and start my own business with this blank ATM card. Are you poor and need help then contact him now. Mr.Alexander email address is alexanderhackers01@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteHello Guys!! I am Belinda. I live in Chicago USA. I am very excited today and do not know where to start my testimony from. I was a poor woman with 3 kids and find it difficult to pay my bills and feed my kids.My husband left me and the kids for another woman and ever since then we were living in pain and hunger but just few days ago i came across a testimony of a man who got a blank ATM card from Mr.Alexander so i immediately contacted him for the same type of ATM card and i am very happy to announce to the world that i am living a fulfilled life. This blank ATM card can withdraw up to 10,000 dollars and more daily without you having any account with any bank. I have been able to buy a house and start my own business with this blank ATM card. Are you poor and need help then contact him now. Mr.Alexander email address is alexanderhackers01@gmail.com
ReplyDeletePLEASE READ!!!
ReplyDeleteHello Everyone, I'm Lucy, 32 Years Old. I live in Virginia,USA. I have 2 kids and I had to look after them after my husband died in a road accident. I was working as an accountant until I lost my job last year due to Covid-19, I had not paid my bills and my kids were scared of getting evicted from the house. So one morning I was online trying to find a new job that I can work and get paid hourly. Then I came across Mr. Sebastian comments on how he helped many people get their blank ATM card that changed their life for good. I decided to contact Mr Sebastian for same blank ATM card since it was difficult for me to feed my kids and pay their bills i emailed him at (sebastianhackers01@gmail.com) and they responded immediately i agreed to their terms and conditions and believe me to my greatest surprise i received my card in 2 days delivered by DHL and i went straight to the nearest atm machine i was able to withdraw $10,000 instantly with no trace of getting caught i was happy and now i have used the card to withdraw $100,000 and i keep renewing my card every time it expires.Thank you Sebastian if you need his help out there contact him now: sebastianhackers01@gmail.com