Here, she devotes herself to improving the lives of the immigrant Indians who come to buy her spices-including an abused wife, a troubled youth, a chauffeur with dreams of American wealth, and a grandfather whose insistence on Old World propriety may have cost him his relationship with a beloved granddaughter. The place where Nayan Tara (now renamed Tilottama, or Tilo) eventually lands happens to be the Spice Bazaar in a rough section of Oakland, California-a tiny, rundown shop from which the now- aged Tilo is forbidden to venture. There, she is initiated into a priestly sisterhood of Spice Mistresses sent out into the world to help others, offering magic potions of fennel, peppercorn, lotus root, etc. Resentful at being treated so shabbily, young Nayan Tara throws herself on the mercy of the mythical serpents of the oceans, who deliver her to the mystical Island of Spices. Born ugly and unwanted in a tiny village in India, Nayan Tara (``Flower That Grows by the Dust Road'') is virtually discarded by her family for the sin of being a girl. The author of the promising story collection Arranged Marriage (1995) employs magical realism to delve back into the lives of Indian immigrants-all of whom, in this case, consult an ancient shamanic spice-vendor in their efforts to improve their lives.
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