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Some People

A Novel

Author Parini Shroff On Tour
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On sale Jul 07, 2026 | 10 Hours and 1 Minute | 9798217342907

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A man on the brink of divorce is forced to care for his injured future-ex-mother-in-law in this wise, witty, and heartfelt novel from the bestselling author of The Bandit Queens.

Malti Patel is absolutely fine. Concussed and bruised, maybe, but fine. Certainly fine enough to not need her daughter's soon-to-be-ex-husband, Nathan Whitlock, playing nurse in her home while she recuperates. And yet, that's exactly the quandary in which she finds herself. Her doctor insists on in-home supervision for seven days, and with her daughter, Kavya, abroad at grad school in India, Nathan proves too much of a do-gooder to let Malti rehabilitate alone. Seven days of Nathan, the man divorcing her daughter for all manner of reasons: cultural misunderstanding, emotional walls, simmering hostility...most of them having to do with Kavya's baggage from her childhood.

They want nothing to do with one another. But over the course of the week, as Malti grapples with the shadows of her past and Nathan ponders the wreckage of his marriage, they learn that they are the two people who know Kavya best—and the ones who have hurt her so deeply that she's left them both.

Rich with emotional depth, Some People paints a nuanced portrait of love, forgiveness, and our timeless quest for understanding and acceptance.
One

When the call came, the notification banner interrupted the animated bug guts glowing in the dark of his office-cum-gaming room. He was certain he’d set his phone to do not disturb, but the alert waylaid his armored avatar’s mission. The gigantic bugs quickly prevailed, and their team failed their assignment of “spreading managed democracy.” He apologized to his two friends, removed his Sony XM5 headphones, and answered the call. He did not usually entertain unknown numbers, but his phone identified what he could not. The words office of dr. edward smolinski, md scrolled across his screen even though said doctor was not a saved contact of his. The brief question of whether Dr. and MD together was tautological grazed him. Perhaps not, he reasoned, as there were various species of lettered doctorates, though not all ones you’d hope for as a plane passenger.

“Hello.”

“Hello, is this Nathan Whitlock?” a woman asked.

“Speaking.” He leaned back in his chair, which swiveled with the weight distribution. The overhead lights were off, but not the hexagon LEDs he’d mounted on the charcoal walls he’d painted himself. When he and Kavya had vacated the house and he’d bought his new place, he took to nesting earnestly. He would bet decent money that Kavya had not. Before clearing out her rented apartment to leave for her graduate program in India three months ago, she’d probably still been watching media on a crate-propped laptop while eating from a compostable takeout container. The thought was filled with affection rather than rancor; he’d stopped trying to force the latter. The rhythmic LED lights melted from blue to purple as he waited for information from the woman who’d called. A frozen tableau of his Helldivers video game glowed across his curved computer monitor.

“Mr. Whitlock, hello. I see you’re the emergency contact listed for your wife, Kavya Patel—”

He didn’t bother correcting her, only straightened, his ergonomic chair popping to attention. “Is she okay? She’s supposed to be out of the country.”

An odd statement, as though Kavya was some spy on the lam rather than a student in her forties, but the woman was a consummate professional. “No, this call is not about her. This is unorthodox, I know, but Ms. Malti Patel’s emergency contact is your wife, who is also a patient here, and her emergency contact is you.”

“Okay,” he said slowly.

“Ms. Patel was in our care and she’s ready to be released, but not alone, and since you say your wife is out of the country, we’re hoping you could pick her up.”

“Isn’t this a HIPAA violation?” He was not being contrary, he was just curious. But Kavya often told him that his frank way with questions could be off-putting, leading people to take umbrage. The thing was, people were always jumping to read more into his questions than he intended. Like an accusation of material failure lurked behind it and they needed to protect themselves. Tone, Kavya explained, tone and, well, his face, which only smiled when he was sincerely amused. He rarely smiled to be polite, which was, to him, a cousin of dishonesty. He recognized the logic of attracting more flies with honey; his issue was producing honey. He’d’ve made a terrible bee.

Sure enough, the woman’s tone soured from imploring to defensive. “It’s your mother-in-law.”

“Did she say you could contact me?” Again, he was simply curious. Very curious, because if there was one thing Nathan knew Malti Patel didn’t want, it was him in her business. The only one she wouldn’t mind in her business was her daughter, who’d left them both for India. Meanwhile, he and his erstwhile mother-in-law shared a Mountain View zip code and little else.

“Why don’t you come down and we’ll sort it out with her.” She waited a beat before stiffly adding, “We wouldn’t want to violate HIPAA.”

Yup, definitely offended.
© Devin Spratt
Parini Shroff is the bestselling author of The Bandit Queens, which was a Good Morning America Buzz Pick, a PEN Open Book finalist, and longlisted for the Andrew Carnegie Medal and the Women's Prize for Fiction. She received her MFA from the University of Texas at Austin. She is a practicing attorney and currently lives in the Bay Area. View titles by Parini Shroff
Praise for The Bandit Queens

“A radically feel-good story.”The New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice

“[A] wild ride . . . very funny—like, laugh-out-loud funny.”—NPR

“A rollicking ride rife with memorable characters . . . It also serves up commentary on class, power dynamics and the role of women in society.”Good Housekeeping

“[Parini] Shroff cleverly considers how women might achieve autonomy within rural India’s patriarchal society through shrewd, if complicated, female friendships.”The Washington Post

“With acuity, wit, and a certain kind of magic irreverence, Shroff captures the complexity of female friendship, turning on a dime from humor to horror, horror to heart, and then back again, exhilarating her reader until the very last line. Tender, unpredictable, and brimming with laugh-out-loud moments, The Bandit Queens heralds a prodigious and sophisticated literary talent.”Téa Obreht, New York Times bestselling author of The Tiger’s Wife and Inland

“At times deeply serious, then laugh-out-loud funny, Shroff has written a sobering but hopeful exploration of womanhood, social injustices, and second chances.”—Charmaine Wilkerson, New York Times bestselling author of Black Cake

About

A man on the brink of divorce is forced to care for his injured future-ex-mother-in-law in this wise, witty, and heartfelt novel from the bestselling author of The Bandit Queens.

Malti Patel is absolutely fine. Concussed and bruised, maybe, but fine. Certainly fine enough to not need her daughter's soon-to-be-ex-husband, Nathan Whitlock, playing nurse in her home while she recuperates. And yet, that's exactly the quandary in which she finds herself. Her doctor insists on in-home supervision for seven days, and with her daughter, Kavya, abroad at grad school in India, Nathan proves too much of a do-gooder to let Malti rehabilitate alone. Seven days of Nathan, the man divorcing her daughter for all manner of reasons: cultural misunderstanding, emotional walls, simmering hostility...most of them having to do with Kavya's baggage from her childhood.

They want nothing to do with one another. But over the course of the week, as Malti grapples with the shadows of her past and Nathan ponders the wreckage of his marriage, they learn that they are the two people who know Kavya best—and the ones who have hurt her so deeply that she's left them both.

Rich with emotional depth, Some People paints a nuanced portrait of love, forgiveness, and our timeless quest for understanding and acceptance.

Excerpt

One

When the call came, the notification banner interrupted the animated bug guts glowing in the dark of his office-cum-gaming room. He was certain he’d set his phone to do not disturb, but the alert waylaid his armored avatar’s mission. The gigantic bugs quickly prevailed, and their team failed their assignment of “spreading managed democracy.” He apologized to his two friends, removed his Sony XM5 headphones, and answered the call. He did not usually entertain unknown numbers, but his phone identified what he could not. The words office of dr. edward smolinski, md scrolled across his screen even though said doctor was not a saved contact of his. The brief question of whether Dr. and MD together was tautological grazed him. Perhaps not, he reasoned, as there were various species of lettered doctorates, though not all ones you’d hope for as a plane passenger.

“Hello.”

“Hello, is this Nathan Whitlock?” a woman asked.

“Speaking.” He leaned back in his chair, which swiveled with the weight distribution. The overhead lights were off, but not the hexagon LEDs he’d mounted on the charcoal walls he’d painted himself. When he and Kavya had vacated the house and he’d bought his new place, he took to nesting earnestly. He would bet decent money that Kavya had not. Before clearing out her rented apartment to leave for her graduate program in India three months ago, she’d probably still been watching media on a crate-propped laptop while eating from a compostable takeout container. The thought was filled with affection rather than rancor; he’d stopped trying to force the latter. The rhythmic LED lights melted from blue to purple as he waited for information from the woman who’d called. A frozen tableau of his Helldivers video game glowed across his curved computer monitor.

“Mr. Whitlock, hello. I see you’re the emergency contact listed for your wife, Kavya Patel—”

He didn’t bother correcting her, only straightened, his ergonomic chair popping to attention. “Is she okay? She’s supposed to be out of the country.”

An odd statement, as though Kavya was some spy on the lam rather than a student in her forties, but the woman was a consummate professional. “No, this call is not about her. This is unorthodox, I know, but Ms. Malti Patel’s emergency contact is your wife, who is also a patient here, and her emergency contact is you.”

“Okay,” he said slowly.

“Ms. Patel was in our care and she’s ready to be released, but not alone, and since you say your wife is out of the country, we’re hoping you could pick her up.”

“Isn’t this a HIPAA violation?” He was not being contrary, he was just curious. But Kavya often told him that his frank way with questions could be off-putting, leading people to take umbrage. The thing was, people were always jumping to read more into his questions than he intended. Like an accusation of material failure lurked behind it and they needed to protect themselves. Tone, Kavya explained, tone and, well, his face, which only smiled when he was sincerely amused. He rarely smiled to be polite, which was, to him, a cousin of dishonesty. He recognized the logic of attracting more flies with honey; his issue was producing honey. He’d’ve made a terrible bee.

Sure enough, the woman’s tone soured from imploring to defensive. “It’s your mother-in-law.”

“Did she say you could contact me?” Again, he was simply curious. Very curious, because if there was one thing Nathan knew Malti Patel didn’t want, it was him in her business. The only one she wouldn’t mind in her business was her daughter, who’d left them both for India. Meanwhile, he and his erstwhile mother-in-law shared a Mountain View zip code and little else.

“Why don’t you come down and we’ll sort it out with her.” She waited a beat before stiffly adding, “We wouldn’t want to violate HIPAA.”

Yup, definitely offended.

Author

© Devin Spratt
Parini Shroff is the bestselling author of The Bandit Queens, which was a Good Morning America Buzz Pick, a PEN Open Book finalist, and longlisted for the Andrew Carnegie Medal and the Women's Prize for Fiction. She received her MFA from the University of Texas at Austin. She is a practicing attorney and currently lives in the Bay Area. View titles by Parini Shroff

Praise

Praise for The Bandit Queens

“A radically feel-good story.”The New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice

“[A] wild ride . . . very funny—like, laugh-out-loud funny.”—NPR

“A rollicking ride rife with memorable characters . . . It also serves up commentary on class, power dynamics and the role of women in society.”Good Housekeeping

“[Parini] Shroff cleverly considers how women might achieve autonomy within rural India’s patriarchal society through shrewd, if complicated, female friendships.”The Washington Post

“With acuity, wit, and a certain kind of magic irreverence, Shroff captures the complexity of female friendship, turning on a dime from humor to horror, horror to heart, and then back again, exhilarating her reader until the very last line. Tender, unpredictable, and brimming with laugh-out-loud moments, The Bandit Queens heralds a prodigious and sophisticated literary talent.”Téa Obreht, New York Times bestselling author of The Tiger’s Wife and Inland

“At times deeply serious, then laugh-out-loud funny, Shroff has written a sobering but hopeful exploration of womanhood, social injustices, and second chances.”—Charmaine Wilkerson, New York Times bestselling author of Black Cake

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