Sujata Massey was born in England to parents from India and Germany, grew up in St. Paul, Minnesota, and lives in Baltimore, Maryland. She was a features reporter for the Baltimore Evening Sun before becoming a full-time novelist. The first Perveen Mistry novel, The Widows of Malabar Hill, was an international bestseller and won the Agatha, Macavity, and Mary Higgins Clark Awards. Visit her website at sujatamassey.com.
Praise for The Mistress of Bhatia House
Winner of the Agatha Award for Best Historical Mystery
A Best Summer Reading Selection from the Boston Globe, Minneapolis
Star Tribune and Baltimore Sun
Open Letters Best Mystery Books of 2023
“Brilliantly pictured 1922 India.”
—The New York Times Book Review
“Massey's evocative mysteries featuring Mistry have always woven
political, cultural and critical social issues into a compelling
historical mystery. This one's threads could be worn today.”
—Carole E. Barrowman, The Minneapolis Star Tribune
“Like its predecessors, The Mistress of Bhatia House showcases
Massey’s deep knowledge of India’s history, her stylish prose and,
above all, her profound feminism. Devotees of classic — and classy
— suspense will find multiple, if disturbing, pleasures in this
paragon of historical fiction.”
—Richmond Times-Dispatch
“[Massey] grapples with class divisions and sexism as Mistry, the
city’s only female solicitor, seeks justice for a mistreated young
nursemaid.”
—Baltimore Sun
“[A] compelling installment in this excellent series.”
—Boston Globe
“[The] series keeps getting stronger with each book... While the
book is rich in historical detail, it also has immense resonance in
a post-Dobbs United States.”
—The Christian Science Monitor
“Massey fills these novels with exquisite details, including food
and clothes. More than once I’ve gone searching the internet for a
recipe or off to Devon Avenue for ingredients to create a tea she
describes. She goes into great detail in fashion—whether it be silk
saris or a Schiaparelli gown, and accessories, from Perveen’s
leather briefcase by Swaine Adeney Brigg or the local heiress’
Vionnet handbag. The description of Perveen’s bedroom alone is
divine, not to mention the adjacent garden-view veranda complete
with a pet parrot that swoops in for fruit snacks, or her
black-and-white tiled en suite bathroom. I can’t be the only one
yearning for PBS to create an adaptation!”
—Newcity Lit
“Massey plays her own self-imposed game of multidimensional chess,
not only hybridizing mystery and historical fiction, but also
balancing the need to plot individual novels alongside the progress
of the entire series... Many of the developments in The
Mistress of Bhatia House feel very close and all too timely. With
each of her books, Massey orients the action around a theme or
issue, and this one focuses on health care freedom and access.”
—Washington City Paper
”A must read.”
—The News-Review
“The Mistress of Bhatia House is a riveting murder case, filled
with intriguing characters, a potentially life-threatening
investigation that is complex and dangerous as there may be some
high-level cover-ups involved. It is a spell-binding novel you will
not want to put down until the final page is read.”
—BookTrib
“For my money, Sujata Massey's Perveen Mistry historical series is
one of the best ones out there. This talented writer never fails to
take me deep into 1920s Bombay, India, and keep me there throughout
her story. The Mistress of Bhatia House is no exception.”
—Kittling Books
“Complex and emotionally powerful.”
—Open Letters
“A complex whodunit that also provides a fascinating immersion in a
bygone era.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Provocative... Through Perveen, readers see an Oxford-educated
lawyer from a privileged family plausibly contend with the sexism
and racism of her time and place—and when Massey returns to the
plot’s core mystery, she manages some nifty surprises. This is a
transporting mystery.”
—Publishers Weekly
Praise for the Perveen Mistry novels
“Well-researched and convincing.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“Marvelously plotted, richly detailed.”
—The Washington Post
"Massey offers a striking depiction of India in the 1920s, complete
with maps, detailed descriptions of the customs of the time, and a
panoramic cast of characters from every social stratum. A complex
whodunit that also provides a fascinating immersion in a bygone
era."
—Kirkus Reviews
“Massey is very good at evoking period details, but she really
excels at illuminating the deeply ingrained restrictions imposed by
racism, sexism and India’s caste system. Her historical research is
thorough but worn lightly, and her concerns with social injustice
are never preachy.”
—The Seattle Times
“Perveen Mistry has all the pluck you want in a sleuthing lawyer,
as well as a not-so-surprising—but decidedly welcome—proclivity for
poking her nose into the business of others. The pages do indeed
fly.”
—The Globe and Mail
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