In "Woman of an Uncertain Age" Naina Mehta, a fifty-something Indian laborer widow with created youths in the US disdains the ordinary image of the developing Indian widow wearing controlled colors and focused in solely on her children and God.
After Naina loses her husband, she sets out on a novel and solid trip by moving to New York from New Jersey, going completely gaga for her daughter's lover, restricting any relationship with the Indian social class, and having a relationship with a Pakistani man, much to her Islamophobic youngster's embarrassment.
All through the novel, Naina wrestles with questions like maternal love and ethical commitment versus confidence, and sincere and capable contemplations versus her own requirements.
Be that as it may, when she blossoms into a more excessive type of herself, we see her purposefully organizing the cutoff points between selfhood, womanhood and life as a parent as per her own inclinations.
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