Socialite Evenings
| This article does not cite any sources.  (August 2012) | 
| File:SocialiteEvenings.jpg | |
| Author | Shobha De | 
|---|---|
| Country | India | 
| Language | English | 
| Genre | Novel | 
| Publisher | Penguin Books | 
| Publication date | 1989 | 
| Media type | Print (Paperback) | 
| ISBN | 0-14-012267-2 | 
| OCLC | 21599147 | 
| LC Class | MLCS 89/00052 (P) | 
| Followed by | Starry Nights | 
Socialite Evenings is Shobha De's first novel. It describes Mumbai high society and explores the lives of bored, rich housewives trapped in loveless marriages and engaging in ill-fated extramarital affairs, smug selfish husbands who use their wives more for social respectability than for love, fashionable parties, false spiritual leaders, and a portrait of the general moral, spiritual and intellectual bankruptcy and decadence of the elite who have traded their traditional culture for Westernization and materialism.[citation needed]
Plot summary[edit]
Karuna, the main protagonist and narrator is caught up in a drab, boring life that she seeks to escape by writing memoirs. Her memoirs are successful and she achieves a measure of fame and pride in herself as she becomes an active socialite and eventually uses her newfound prominence as a celebrity to get herself a position as an advertising copywriter and creator of a television series.[citation needed]
Literary significance & criticism[edit]
Socialite Evenings was a critical disaster but a commercial success, likely due in part to its racy and controversial content, something that was unusual in India.[citation needed] It was criticized by traditional elements in Indian society. Although a novel, it closely parallels Shobha De's own rise to fame and appeared to be partially autobiographical.[citation needed]
Release details[edit]
- 1989, India, Penguin, New Delhi ISBN 0-14-012267-2, Pub date ? ? 1989, paperback
- 1995, India, Penguin, New Delhi ISBN ?, Pub date ? ? 1995, paperback (as part of The Shobha De Omnibus)
