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The Chai Factor
The Chai Factor: A Novel | Farah Heron
9 posts | 9 read | 9 to read
Amira Khan has no plans to break her no-dating rule. Thirty-year-old engineer Amira Khan has set one rule for herself: no dating until her grad-school thesis is done. Nothing can distract her from completing a paper that is so good her boss will give her the promotion she deserves when she returns to work in the city. Amira leaves campus early, planning to work in the quiet basement apartment of her familys house. But she arrives home to find that her grandmother has rented the basement to . . . a barbershop quartet. Seriously? The living situation is awkward: Amira needs silence; the quartet needs to rehearse for a competition; and Duncan, the small-town baritone with the flannel shirts, is driving her up the wall. As Amira and Duncan clash, she is surprised to feel a simmering attraction for him. How can she be interested in someone who doesnt get her, or her familys culture? This is not a complication she needs when her future is at stake. But when intolerance rears its ugly head and people who are close to Amira get hurt, she learns that there is more to Duncan than meets the eye. Now she must decide what she is willing to fight for. In the end, it may be that this small-town singer is the only person who sees her at all.
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llwheeler
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Challenge catch up post. Read this a while ago for #fourfoursin22 aromatic, cause of the title. Turns out the title didn't have much to do with the story but I enjoyed this romance anyway! Especially the Ontario setting, always fun to read a story set places you know.

@Lauredhel

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Jas16
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Pickpick

Amira heads home so that she can finish the last project for her Masters in peace and quiet only to find that a barbershop quartet has moved in. Sounds cute and fun right? Parts of this book absolutely are but it also tackles a lot within its pages- racism, homophobia, Islamaphobia. This wasn‘t the light read I was expecting but I ended up liking it all the more for it.
#musicalinstrumentoncover #booked2021

41 likes1 stack add
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janeycanuck
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Pickpick

A solid debut but longer than it needed to be. Amira was a strong, beautiful character that I loved from the first page. The snark and humour were just what I needed in a book during these weird times.

27 likes1 stack add
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janeycanuck
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Read for about 20 minutes at lunch today and am now snuggled up with the pup to get an hour in before bed.

#EasterExtravaganza

Graywacke So cute! 4y
Andrew65 Great picture. 😊 4y
31 likes2 comments
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Owlizabeth
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Pickpick

Very cute, if highly improbable story, about a Muslim Indian-Canadian woman and a white barbershop quartet singing man who fall in love. Touches on all types of prejudices amongst all types of people and how we deal with “traditional” family members. Kept me company in an insomnia/migraine haze. 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼1/2

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janeycanuck
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We had a great time at the Eden Mills Writers‘ Festival last week - picked up a couple of books by authors we heard on panels and one from a local author with a booth on Publishers Way. Really interested the tagged book but looking forward to them all!

Melissa_J I really wish Ottawa had a book or writers festival 😢 5y
janeycanuck @Melissa_J It doesn‘t have one?! That surprises me. You should start one! Or plan a road trip to Eden Mills next year 🤪 5y
Melissa_J Well I should have googled before I commented. Apparently there is an author‘s festival in Oct. I‘m not too interested in the line-up though, except maybe Terry Fallis. 5y
27 likes3 comments
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Expandingbookshelf
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Pickpick

Engineering student Amira Khan has set one rule for herself: no dating until her grad-school thesis is done. Needing some peace and quiet, she heads back to her family‘s house in the suburbs to finish her project. But she arrives home to find out her grandmother rented their basement to…a barbershop quartet?! Honestly, as soon as these dudes started singing I was hooked. “The Chai Factor” is a charming story that really worked for me.

janeycanuck I saw the author at the Eden Mills Writers‘ Festival this past weekend and the book was described as Bollywood meets Monty Python meets Jane Austen! 5y
Expandingbookshelf @janeycanuck haha I wouldn‘t compare it to Monty Python... 5y
9 likes2 stack adds2 comments
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danimgill
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Mehso-so

I was hooked by the premise - ambitious grad student Amira returns to her grandmother‘s house to finish her thesis and finds she has to share the space with a barbershop quartet, one of whom she hate-likes - and I appreciated the frank discussions of race, culture, and discrimination. But the author tries to cram too much in and some plotlines end up feeling incomplete or ignored. 100 pages could have been cut and it would‘ve felt more cohesive.

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charl08
Pickpick

I really liked this: Muslim woman engineer moves home to find a barber shop is renting the flat where she was hoping to finish her thesis and go back to her old job. She's got more challenges than her career, coping with prejudice and trying to work out if the cute singer is worth fighting for (as well as with).

36 likes2 stack adds