Tuesday, June 9, 2020

Dharma A Rekha Rao Mystery by Vee Kumari

_Dharma VBT social media graphic .png

Dharma by Vee Kumari

Paperback: 302 pages
Publisher: Great Life Press (March 2020)
ISBN-13: 978-1938394423
$4.99  Ebook
$14.95  Print


About the Book:
Rekha Rao, a thirty-something Indian American professor of art history, is disillusioned by academia and haunted by the murder of her father. She believes police convicted the wrong person, and moves away from her match-making family.

She’s focused on managing her PTSD and healing her heart, broken by an abusive boyfriend. She gets entangled in a second murder, that of her mentor and father figure. The murder weapon, an idol of the Hindu goddess Durga, is left behind on the body. Detective Al Newton asks her to look into the relationship, if any, between the meaning of the statue and the motive for the murder.

Rekha is attracted to Al but steers clear of him because of her distaste for cops and fear of a new relationship. The two constantly clash, starting a love-hate relationship. Meanwhile, her family sets her up to meet a suitor, an Indian attorney. When police arrest one of her students and accuse her mentor of idol theft, Rekha is left with no other choice but to look for the killer on her own.

Despite admonitions from Al and bodily harm caused by an intruder, Rekha finds the killer, and in the process, emerges from the cocoon of a protected upbringing to taste the prospect of romance and discover her true identity.

Vee Kumari shares about her work
"How much research went into Dharma and how I went about it"

I had to do quite a bit of research to ensure the facts presented are accurate. I
hope I haven’t erred by omission. As a former neuroscientist, I was used to
research.

  • Excavation in India

The story of the discovery of microliths, 35,000-year-old stone tools in Jwalapuram in the state of Andhra Pradesh in central India, is true and comes from an article I came across in the journal, Antiquity (Volume 83Issue 320, June 2009, pp. 326-348), written by first author Chris Clarkson. I wanted to connect Faust and Davidson with an excavation in India where the Durga could be discovered.

Certainly, no idol was reported to have been unearthed among the Jwalapuram finds, but I used my creative license to invent that. I wrote and obtained permission from the first author to do this. Any reader who notices the discrepancy in the timeline – excavation of the microliths published in 2009 and the beginning of my story in 2017 – will hopefully forgive me.

  • The Durga as the Mahishasura Mardini

I knew the basics about this re-incarnation, and how Durga herself was created from parts of the Trinity, Brahma, Vishnu and Shiva. However, I checked the facts against known texts and made sure to depict the battle between Durga and the buffalo demon, Mahishasura in accurate terms. Two books by Carmel Berkson, “The Divine and The Demoniac, Mahisha’s Heroic Struggle with Durga” published in 1995, and “Ellora Concepts and Style” published in 1992 were most valuable resources.


Again, I’m unclear how I came up with the name Faust for the murdered professor. But it provided a source for the verse that Neil’s mother included in the book she left for him. I Googled the verse innumerable times to make sure that it would bring up the original text and it did. The idea of Neil’s mother leaving a cryptic message for him came from a less well-known mystery novel by P.D. James, “An Unsuitable Job For A Woman”, in which a private detective, Cordelia Gray, embarks on a journey to find the killer of the son of a prominent scientist.

  • Other resources

Contacts at Massachusetts Document Retrieval provided information about the registration of births, adoptions and deaths by suicides in Massachusetts. Harvard Archives Reference office helped me with information on graduate student registration process in 1996-1997.

My Review
Couched within a murder mystery is a woman seeking self-identity while maintaining her cultural heritage.

Rekha Rao, an art history professor, has been forced to redo her life while in her early thirties when a poor choice of a boyfriend blew up, and the ill-advised pursuit of a killer which cost her tenure-tract and respect. Kind of a practice reincarnation. And that’s before this mystery opens with the gruesome death of another loved one.

Professor Rao is tapped by the local police when a strange artifact is involved in the murder of a beloved colleague. The circumstances are bizarre, almost as if the victim had undergone a personality change, and Rao is determined to understand why anyone would have cause to hate the gentle, kind, and fair professor, a renowned archaeologist.

As the story unwinds, Rao reckons with her overly loving family who tries to help her overcome her single status with a suitable suitor. Trouble is, she’s attracted once again to the wrong sort—a detective investigating the case. During the course of the story, Rao struggles with belief in herself and others as she practices the gentle art of listening. As she gets closer to the truth behind the professor’s murder, she learns more about herself, and all the things that went wrong after her father’s murder only a few years prior.


I enjoyed the bits of Indian culture, history, food, fashion, and angst that Kumari weaves throughout this contemporary mystery set in California academia.

About the Author
Vee Kumari Headshot.jpgVee Kumari, Actor, Producer, and Author of Dharma: A Rekha Rao Mystery, grew up in India. She loved to read, and often used it to avoid her mother, who might want her to do a chore or two. It was her mother who directed her to use the dictionary to learn the meanings of new words and construct sentences with them. Vee wanted to become an English professor but went to medical school instead.

Upon coming to the US, Vee obtained a doctorate in anatomy. She became a faculty member at the UC Davis Medical Center, where she worked for over 35 years, and later worked for the Keck School of Medicine for five years. Teaching neuroanatomy to medical students became her passion. She published many scientific papers and won several teaching awards.

When she retired in 2012, she took classes from The Gotham Writers' Workshop and UCLA Writers Program. Dharma, A Rekha Rao Mystery is her debut fiction that incorporates her observations on the lives of Indian immigrants and Indian Americans in the US.

Vee lives in Burbank and is also an actor who has appeared in TV shows, including Criminal Minds and Glow, and produced and was the lead in a short film, Halwa, which garnered the first prize in HBO's 2019 Asian Pacific American Visionaries (APAV) contest.

She is at work on her next novel about an Indian immigrant family whose American dream shatters when one of their twin daughters goes missing. Author website: veekumari.com

Facebook: @veekumari
Instagram:  @vee6873hollywood
Twitter: @veekumari1


No comments:

Post a Comment