Current:Home > NewsBook excerpt: "The Covenant of Water" by Abraham Verghese -Achieve Wealth Network
Book excerpt: "The Covenant of Water" by Abraham Verghese
View
Date:2025-04-25 20:28:31
We may receive an affiliate commission from anything you buy from this article.
Dr. Abraham Verghese teaches medical students at Stanford University's School of Medicine. But he has another calling: author. His novel "The Covenant of Water" (Grove/Atlantic), a multi-generational tale of a family in India experiencing love and tragedy, was a New York Times bestseller, and an Oprah's Book Club pick.
Read an excerpt below, and don't miss Tracy Smith's interview with Abraham Verghese on "CBS Sunday Morning" April 21!
"The Covenant of Water" by Abraham Verghese
$19 at AmazonPrefer to listen? Audible has a 30-day free trial available right now.
Try Audible for free1900, Travancore, South India
She is twelve years old, and she will be married in the morning. Mother and daughter lie on the mat, their wet cheeks glued together.
"The saddest day of a girl's life is the day of her wedding," her mother says. "After that, God willing, it gets better."
Soon she hears her mother's sniffles change to steady breathing, then to the softest of snores, which in the girl's mind seem to impose order on the scattered sounds of the night, from the wooden walls exhaling the day's heat to the scuffing sound of the dog in the sandy courtyard outside.
A brainfever bird calls out: Kezhekketha? Kezhekketha? Which way is east? Which way is east? She imagines the bird looking down at the clearing where the rectangular thatched roof squats over their house. It sees the lagoon in front and the creek and the paddy field behind. The bird's cry can go on for hours, depriving them of sleep ... but just then it is cut off abruptly, as though a cobra has snuck up on it. In the silence that follows, the creek sings no lullaby, only grumbling over the polished pebbles.
She awakes before dawn while her mother still sleeps. Through the window, the water in the paddy field shimmers like beaten silver. On the front verandah, her father's ornate charu kasera, or lounging chair, sits forlorn and empty. She lifts the writing pallet that straddles the long wooden arms and seats herself. She feels her father's ghostly impression preserved in the cane weave.
On the banks of the lagoon four coconut trees grow sideways, skimming the water as if to preen at their reflections before straightening to the heavens. Goodbye, lagoon. Goodbye, creek.
"Molay?" her father's only brother had said the previous day, to her surprise. Of late he wasn't in the habit of using the endearment molay—daughter—with her. "We found a good match for you!" His tone was oily, as though she were four, not twelve. "Your groom values the fact that you're from a good family, a priest's daughter." She knew her uncle had been looking to get her married off for a while, but she still felt he was rushing to arrange this match. What could she say? Such matters were decided by adults. The helplessness on her mother's face embarrassed her. She felt pity for her mother, when she so wanted to feel respect. Later, when they were alone, her mother said, "Molay, this is no longer our house. Your uncle ..." She was pleading, as if her daughter had protested. Her words had trailed off, her eyes darting around nervously. The lizards on the walls carried tales. "How different from here can life be there? You'll feast at Christmas, fast for Lent ... church on Sundays. The same Eucharist, the same coconut palms and coffee bushes. It's a fine matc ... He's of good means."
Why would a man of good means marry a girl of little means, a girl without a dowry? What are they keeping secret from her? What does he lack? Youth, for one—he's forty. He already has a child. A few days before, after the marriage broker had come and gone, she overheard her uncle chastise her mother, saying, "So what if his aunt drowned? Is that the same as a family history of lunacy? Whoever heard of a family with a history of drownings? Others are always jealous of a good match and they'll find one thing to exaggerate."
Excerpted from "The Covenant of Water" © 2023 by Abraham Verghese. Reprinted with the permission of the publisher, Grove Press, an imprint of Grove Atlantic, Inc. All rights reserved.
Get the book here:
"The Covenant of Water" by Abraham Verghese
$19 at Amazon $25 at Barnes & NobleBuy locally from Bookshop.org
For more info:
- "The Covenant of Water" by Abraham Verghese (Grove/Atlantic), in Hardcover, Large Print, eBook and Audio formats
- abrahamverghese.org
- Abraham Verghese, MD, MACP, Stanford University School of Medicine
- A reader's guide for "The Covenant of Water," Oprah's Book Club pick
veryGood! (3897)
Related
- House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
- Report: Young driver fatality rates have fallen sharply in the US, helped by education, technology
- Indonesia’s ruling party picks top security minister to run for VP in next year’s election
- Trevor May rips Oakland A's owner John Fisher in retirement stream: 'Sell the team dude'
- Nearly half of US teens are online ‘constantly,’ Pew report finds
- Mississippi county closes jail pod plagued by fights and escapes, sends 200 inmates 2 hours away
- ADL official on anti-Jewish, Muslim hate: 'Our fight is often one that is together'
- Ex-Oregon prison nurse convicted of sexually assaulting women in custody gets 30 years
- Elon Musk's skyrocketing net worth: He's the first person with over $400 billion
- Inflation in UK unchanged at 6.7% in September, still way more than Bank of England’s target of 2%
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- South Africa hopes to ease crippling blackouts as major power station recovers
- Autoworkers used to have lifelong health care and pension income. They want it back
- Deadly attack in Belgium ignites fierce debate on failures of deportation policy
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- As Walter Isaacson and Michael Lewis wrote, their books' heroes became villains
- Report: Young driver fatality rates have fallen sharply in the US, helped by education, technology
- Stock market today: World markets edge lower as China reports slower growth in the last quarter
Recommendation
'We're reborn!' Gazans express joy at returning home to north
These are the 21 species declared extinct by US Fish and Wildlife
Towboat owner pleads guilty to pollution charge in oil spill along West Virginia-Kentucky border
Why the tunnels under Gaza pose a problem for Israel
The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
NIL hearing shows desire to pass bill to help NCAA. How it gets there is uncertain
Court documents detail moments before 6-year-old Muslim boy was fatally stabbed: 'Let’s pray for peace'
Outlooks for the preseason Top 25 of the women's college basketball preseason poll