Sammy overhears the truth about their mothers death. She promises to bury the
truth from all, including her sister Rani. Years later, from the carefully
buried past, the horrific truth of Ranis life, including the story of their
mother, comes out in the least expected waya generation apart.
When a young boy living in India loses his father to an early heart attack,
his world is thrown into disarray. Manoj, just barely old enough to understand
what happened to his father, struggles through his early years as he tries to
come to peace with a life without a father. Worse, his mother is seeing
another man that he doesn't approve of. When bad timing and carelessness
combine to cause Manoj to see his mother and her lover in a compromising
position, the now-teenage boy assaults his mother's boyfriend without
thinking. With the psychological fallout from the trial burning in the
background, readers journey through the formative years of Manoj's life,
examining the way karma and psychology tie together to form a web of
experiences that make up a life. As Manoj grows and develops relationships
with an ever-widening circle of family and friends, the small resonances that
guide our stories are interrogated. And in Manoj's never-ending quest for love
and connection, the very idea of contentment comes into question. In Stream of
Life, all of us are connected, and the ways that we are connected are never as
we imagine. With strong characterizations and a dose of humor, the author
brings us closer to understanding the feeling of a life lived.