#BlogTour The Pleasure Seeker By Robyn Michaels #bookblitz @rabtbooktours

 

Literary Fiction

  Date Published: Sept.2023

   

   

  Dayal Singh is brilliant, quirky, & has Asperger’s. Son of parents

    trafficked to East Africa from India just before independence, he knows he’s

    Sikh, African, and calculus is the evidence of God.

  He becomes fascinated by a broken piano. and is offered a piano to sell,

    buys it and learns to play.

  Mentored by his older brothers, he follows them to Singapore to further his

    education, then goes to Switzerland.

  He falls in love with the granddaughter of the man who bought his father.

    She tells him that the situation is impossible, and that he must stay in

    school as long as his way is paid.

  His youth is fraught, being an other. In Switzerland, he is constantly

    proselytized to, which only defines for him how he wants to live. He’s

    studying physics and engineering, but finds peace in playing the piano. He

    meets other students, they jam, and suddenly they are rock stars…which

    Dayal never imagined could happen.

  He agrees to meet Sita, the daughter of a Sikh man his father met, and

    Dayal thinks they are both in agreement about how they will live and raise

    children, but things gradually go downhill. When Dayal learns Sita hasn’t

    been truthful with him, he has to make a decision.

 

  Excerpt

              The song I wrote, “Is This OK?” was a hit. We got it out as a

    single, and added it to shows. We started in Boston and zigzagged through

    large cities in Canada, the USA, and Mexico, then to Spain and France. We

    broadcasted live shows to theaters around the USA, San Jose, Lima, Buenos

    Aires, Sydney, Perth, and Brasilia, and Japan. I wrote the Glazer girls, but

    there was no way I could see them.

            At the end of the tour in

    August, I flew to Dubai for a week. We hadn’t seen each other since

    December! I couldn’t imagine where Sita got the idea that there was so

    much to do in Dubai. Was she comparing it to Mumbai? I noticed the town was

    growing. There were triple the number of buildings, many quite tall. We got

    out to the desert for camel races, where I saw my first Salukis. I thought

    they looked like Mara’s dogs. They ran a few races, and were so

    graceful. We went out to eat, saw movies, strolled the mall, the beach, met

    her girlfriends (she knew no guys and did not socialize with the

    girls’ brothers or husbands), had dinner with Baba Makkar’s

    other family, and we talked more about our expectations. Again, I asked her

    if she had explored birth control methods, and hit a road block.

            “You know, a lot of

    women use the rhythm method based on their cycles and it works,” she

    said to me.

            “Do you know how it

    works? I will use condoms, but you need to know your options.”

            We had no arguments, but

    our conversations were never about anything controversial or deep. She

    wasn’t wearing a lot of makeup anymore, at least not when I saw her.

    She told me she had started saving her allowance, and was even going through

    her wardrobe to decide what clothes she would really need, as the weather

    would be different in Europe.

            We weren’t sleeping

    together in Dubai, but we could bring each other to orgasm, and I was happy

    for that.

            I asked Fatima about how

    the wedding planning was going, and she told me she was thinking of next

    March.

            Seven months more?

    “Why are you delaying this?”

             “Your

    horoscopes… .”

            “This is nonsense.

    We’ve known each other over a year. I have a school break in November.

    Make it for then.” I found this irritating, but when I was stressed,

    and back then, it was almost all the time, everything was irritating.

            I really wanted to see my

    parents. I was halfway there, being in Dubai, so I asked Fatima and Sita to

    come with me. Mr. Makkar agreed to pay for their flights if I would pay for

    a place for them to stay, which was at Mr. Curtis’s hotel. A few other

    small hotels had been built, but Curtis’ place was still the

    nicest.

            I surprised my parents (I

    did send a telegram). I sent Sita and Fatima on several safari runs,

    suggested they have my tailor create some clothes for themselves, and took

    them around in the truck to see Alfred. I brought him a solar lantern, a few

    books on alternative energy, and a football and badminton set for his three

    children, who were giddy about the gifts.

            Fatima and Sita were

    surprised at how far out from Arusha Alfred lived. When we pulled into their

    compound, Fatima asked me, “They speak English?”

            “Alfred was in

    primary school with me, and he often guides safaris, so I know his English

    is good. I’m not sure about the rest of his family.” I spoke to

    his wife and children in Kiswahili.

            Alfred and I discussed

    putting in a rain catchment system on his house. He had managed to build a

    burned brick house with a cement floor and tin roof, but still had his

    rondoval. His wife and daughters still had to fetch water. I told him

    I’d loan him the money if he agree to pay it forward.

            Sita and Fatima seemed

    uncomfortable with the goats, chickens and dogs approaching us in their

    curiosity. Alfred’s mum offered us chai and mandaazi, which is a fried

    pastry. I saw that Fatima and Sita were hesitant, but I whispered to them,

    “Everything’s boiled or fried. You won’t get

    sick.”

            On the way back to town,

    we stopped at a Maasai encampment. I just wanted to greet them, and I had

    bought them a few plastic buckets. We didn’t stay long. The flies were

    too annoying, and there was no place to sit.

            On the drive back to my

    folks, Sita and Fatima commented how remarkable it was that people could

    live like they did and be so happy. Sita asked me, “How is it you have

    a relationship with such primitive people?”

            Her question shocked me.

    “They aren’t primitive. They’re just poor. You know, they

    haven’t had the advantages we’ve had.”

            “What do you

    mean?”

            “The Maasai like

    living the way they do. They are free. Their children do all the chores. As

    for Alfred, I had my older brothers to help me learn. Alfred was the eldest

    child. He had nobody to help him. Also, his father had two wives, so

    resources for the children were spread thin.”

            My parents were cordial

    towards Sita and Fatima. However, I knew from the way they were acting, that

    they weren’t comfortable. There was a real class difference between us

    and them. Baba pulled me aside and asked, “They knew they were coming

    to Africa. Why didn’t they dress more simply?”

            I remembered the time Avi

    and Sodhi came home after guiding safaris one day, and were counting their

    tips in various foreign currencies. Sodhi remarked that most of the tourists

    on his lorry were French, and Avi responded, laughing, “Today mine

    were all Italian. They always dress like they’re going to a photo

    shoot. The women, always silk shirts unbuttoned to show cleavage and gold

    necklaces, tight silk pants that look painted on, and stiletto heels. Not

    just high heels—pointy six inch heels. They tottered and had to be

    boosted into the lorry. I can’t imagine what they were thinking. That

    the ground would be hard so they wouldn’t sink in?”

            My future wife and

    mother-in-law were dressed as if going to a business luncheon, and I

    wondered if they owned any clothes that didn’t need to be dry

    cleaned.

            “Baba, these people

    live in a tall building. They don’t even have a garden. These are

    their ‘simple’ clothes.” He understood this because he had

    visited my brothers.

            I had been living in

    Europe as a European and just accepted that some people never did any real

    work. This was also why I took time to address expectations with Sita.

  Hassan had brought one of his wives to live with him, and she was helping

    Ama with baking. Fatima expressed surprise that my mother could bake such

    amazing things over a grill in a covered pot.

   

  About the Author

I am retired dog groomer and have titled dogs in performance and

    conformation. I didn’t go to college until I was 30, and took CLEP exams to

    avoid prerequisites. I have a degree in anthropology with concentrations in

    African & Indian studies, and a master’s in urban planning. I was

    a Peace Corps Volunteer in Malawi. I have had several short stories

    published in literary journals, and the pet industry press.

   

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