Girls Burn Brighter

Rating: 
Author: Shobha Rao
Genres: Fiction
Pub date: Mar. 2018 (read June 2018 as audiobook)

This was a super heavy read. At one point I’m sure I read the synopsis for this and thought, a book about disenfranchised women who find power within themselves, how empowering, sign me up. But between reading the synopsis and downloading this book as an audiobook, I totally forgot the plot and was super disturbed at how dark this was!

Girls Burn Brighter is set in India (amongst other places) and focuses on the friendship between two young women, Poornima and Savitha. They are only friends for a short period of time, but they develop a strong relationship during that time and come to realize that the other is the only person to ever truly love and care for them throughout their lives. They are torn apart by the circumstance of being young women of marrying age in India and both suffer some truly atrocious acts of hatred and spite against them.

It’s totally evident if you read the synopsis, but I did not realize this was a book about human trafficking. Human trafficking is one of the great injustices facing our world today and yet there is very little literature devoted to it and it makes for a truly upsetting read. I suffered through this book along with both Poornima and Savitha. It was uncomfortable and hard to read and that’s exactly how a book about human trafficking should be. A few months ago I read a book, A Girl Like That, about the way women are treated in Saudi Arabia and was truly appalled.

For some reason I thought India treated women better (than Saudi at least), but this book shocked me in its malice. The men in this book had so little regard for women and many of the men in the novel truly despised them. Yet I had no problem imagining these men and their cruelty. I did know I was getting myself into a tough read, but this book really made me despair for humanity. It also tells the story of two strong women who, despite all the suffering that has been visited upon them, still yearn and aspire to a better life. They find strength in the love they have for one another and no matter what shit life throws at them, they always continue to pursue something better for themselves, and in Savitha’s case, something better for her family too.

I listened to Girls Burn Brighter as an audiobook, but I’ve since decided to switch back to non-fiction for my audiobooks for a while because this is another book that the audio just didn’t quite do justice to. The writing is quite flowery and I think I would have liked it a lot in written form, but in audio I tended to get a bit distracted by the writing and sometimes would zone out.

The ending is oh so frustrating. I knew I was approaching the end and I was so nervous as to how the author was going to end things and while I don’t fault her for the ending, it was still torture! The plot was a little unbelievable for me, partly because I couldn’t believe so much hardship could be experienced by two people, but also in that the coincidences in this novel were just a little too far past believable for me. But it is a great story about the strength and perseverance of women. Just mentally prepare yourself before you go into this book because it was honestly one of the most emotionally draining books I’ve read it a long time.

6 thoughts on “Girls Burn Brighter

  1. justonemorepaige says:

    I agree with you regarding some of the coincidences being too…easy?… For sure. However, I do have to disagree about the hardships faced being unbelievable. Unfortunately (I studied and work in Maternal and Child Health), this kind of thing is not uncommon. If not necessarily these specific events, at least the fact that things happen to people in multiples, because often the first tragedy leads to/makes you vulnerable for more (if that makes sense).

    Liked by 1 person

    • Maria Adey says:

      Yes good point, I do agree that vulnerability can lead to more and more hardship. Shocking might be a better word. Its definitely a sobering book and unbelievable in the way that from my life of privilege its hard for me to fathom that someone could experience so much suffering, even though that is obviously not the case.

      The piece that struck me most was the needlessness of savitha’s surgery (trying to avoid spoilers) and the bitter torment of it all. But it is an effective symbol of the needless suffering of so many women and the frustration they must feel at being so trapped and taken advantage of.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Shannon @ Shelfish For Books says:

    Girls Burn Brighter sounds like it was quite the journey to read! I’m glad there are more confronting books being published these days. We may not like hearing about society’s lows, but we need to know if we’re going to fix them! Great post 😊💕

    Liked by 1 person

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