Jyoti Thottam is a senior Opinion editor at The New York Times. Prior to joining the Times, she was a reporter, editor and foreign correspondent. From 2008 to 2012, she was Time's South Asia Bureau Chief in New Delhi, where she wrote numerous cover stories, including award-winning stories about the Ganges River and the Mumbai terrorist attacks. Born in India, she grew up in Texas and graduated from Yale and Columbia. She lives with her family in Brooklyn.
One of TIME's Must-Read Spring Books for 2022
"I marvel to think of six nuns from Appalachia in the 1940s
journeying to India and facing unimaginable dangers to build a
hospital that would transform so many lives. Thottam's prose and
her extensive research bring this inspiring story to life. Sisters
of Mokama is proof that faith and courage does move mountains."
—Abraham Verghese, author of Cutting for Stone
"Jyoti Thottam is an elegant, lively writer and this story of a
group of gutsy women on an unlikely journey is utterly
enthralling."
—Sonali Deraniyagala, author of Wave
“An inspiring story about six determined women who defied all odds
and changed the world.”
—Nicholas D. Kristof, Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and
bestselling coauthor of Half the Sky
“Sisters of Mokama is a moving story about a group of indomitable
women, beautifully told by a writer of exceptional talent.”
—Amitav Ghosh, author of Sea of Poppies
"I found myself tearing through the pages, following their journey
and feeling every ache, hope, and accomplishment with them. Simply
put, it's a must-read by Thottam."
—The Everymom
“Once I started this inspiring and unforgettable story, I couldn’t
put it down! ‘Six nuns from Kentucky went to India to open a
hospital’ sounds like the start of a bad joke, but it's true: The
American frontier spirit led six remarkable women to care for
patients in one of the poorest parts of India, in the process
opening a nursing school that trained the author's mother. A
remarkable tale well told.”
—Theresa Brown, PhD, RN, New York Times bestselling author of The
Shift
"Sisters of Mokama takes us on an epic journey from the hills of
Appalachia to the badlands of Bihar, to show how much can be
accomplished by six women determined to make the world a better
place. Among other things, their enterprise enabled the education
of the author's mother as a nurse serving India's poorest. At once
a loving tribute to a mother and a chronicle of India's infancy as
a country struggling to rise from colonialism, Sisters of Mokama is
exemplary nonfiction, told with intelligence, sensitivity, and
compassion."
—Suketu Mehta, author of Maximum City
"Sisters of Mokama is the inspiring story of six Kentucky nuns who
built a hospital in a destitute part of India in 1947, when
diseases like cholera were running rampant. Soon, the nuns opened a
nursing school—and the mother of New York Times editor Jyoti
Thottam (who formerly worked at TIME) was one of the women who
studied there. At the time, Indian women rarely left home without a
man, so the opportunity to train at the hospital was life-changing.
Thottam interviewed more than 60 people to recreate the
determination displayed by the doctors and nurses who worked at the
hospital in its early years, as well as the women who founded
it."
—TIME
“A vivid history . . . The author offers candid, sympathetic
portraits of the doctors and nurses who arrived through the years
to staff the hospital and especially of the six original founders.
. . . An inspiring story of faith and dedication.”
—Kirkus
"A vivid and uplifting portrait . . . full of complex characters
and intriguing historical tidbits, this is a rousing story of hope
and determination."
—Publishers Weekly
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