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India: A Love Story - Romantic Travel Guide & Cultural Exploration | Perfect for Couples, Honeymooners & Adventure Seekers
India: A Love Story - Romantic Travel Guide & Cultural Exploration | Perfect for Couples, Honeymooners & Adventure SeekersIndia: A Love Story - Romantic Travel Guide & Cultural Exploration | Perfect for Couples, Honeymooners & Adventure Seekers

India: A Love Story - Romantic Travel Guide & Cultural Exploration | Perfect for Couples, Honeymooners & Adventure Seekers

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I'm riding a late-night taxi through the streets of Bombay, sidewalks littered with hundreds of bodies, all the way to the curb. This must be some kind of plague, but nobody told me. Deep down, I'm possessed, despite my fear. So begins my love story with India. This narrative records the complex, sometimes funny, sometimes agonizing relationship of two Americans, each drawn deeply by Vedanta into a marriage of East and West on many levels. Their love affair and marriage, in which a passion for India is the driver and fulcrum, opens a wide window on American life, culture, and counterculture, beginning in the late Sixties and extending into the millennium.In Part One, during a Fulbright year based in Malwa studying khyal with the master Kumar Gandharva, I enter an underworld reflection of life in America, immersed in India's smells and sights as well as the inexhaustible sound-world of North Indian vocal music. My newly awakened sexuality is swallowed by the mythic substratum of Hindu goddess figures during a period of instinctive celibacy. Intrigued by an invitation from Maurice Frydman to "join the fellowship of the undeceived," I begin a lifelong effort to practice Advaita through self-inquiry as taught by Ramana Maharshi."I expect to reach enlightenment in this lifetime." She tells me this the week I meet her. In part two, I return to India with my wife Judi, a medical doctor and yoga teacher who is skeptical, reluctant to share the India experience with me. But as we hop between ashrams, she, too, falls in love with India. In the end, we are banished by the head swami, who tells us to go home, have children, fulfill our work, and serve our parents. We can return after we complete our householder duties. When we return to India in the Nineties, the tables have turned. I, once totally smitten, am dismayed by modern India, whereas Judi is ever more deeply enthralled, throwing herself into Sanskrit and taking a teacher, who names her Geeta Jyothi. As our sons leave the house, she begins long winter ashram sojourns, contemplating vows of monkhood which threaten our marriage.This memoir has the potential to interest a wide audience of seekers: those who throng the "spirituality" section in the West - especially "India freaks," their children, and the burgeoning readership of South Asian writers, particularly middle-class Indians who remember the curious phenomenon of the "Amreekan hippy-saddhu." I believe it will appeal to the followers of Ram Das, Ramana Maharshi, Swamis Chidananda and Krishnananda (Sivananda Ashram), and Vinoba Bhave-characters all-but especially of Kumar Gandharva and Sunderlal Bahuguna (Chipko), remarkable figures with whom our lives become intertwined.

Customer Reviews

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Like many young folks who came of age in the socially turbulent early 1970s, I fantasized about going to India to find myself. But my inner turbulence was such that I simply couldn't muster the courage to act on that yearning. Now, many decades later, Robert McGahey's memoir has allowed me to take that journey. This book is a raw and honest account of what it was like to pursue your inner journey in India -- spoiler alert: it isn't easy! The book's title -- "India: A Love Story" -- should be taken literally, for as most people know, falling in love is a process filled with both joy and sorrow, hope and despair, bliss and despondency, yearning and fear. The really beautiful thing about this book, and McGahey's experience, is that it is clear he remains in love (with all the pluses and minuses being in love entail). And he writes in a style that makes you feel as if you are sitting beside a fireplace with a raconteur who is sharing with you a very personal story, one that he himself still is figuring out.