Dial A for Aunties

After reading and loving Jesse Q. Sutanto’s The Obsession, I was delighted to get the ARC for her upcoming novel Dial A For Aunties.

This is a murder / comedy / family drama, all set at an over-the-top wedding. I read this one right after Knit, Purl, A Baby and a Girl, which was sweet new characters set to a very familiar formula.  In Dial A For Aunties, I had absolutely no idea what was going to happen next. NO IDEA. I kept wondering how Meddy and the aunties were going to get out of this one, but then something even crazier would happen.

Without any more spoilers than the back of the book, Meddy accidentally kills her blind date when she’s defending herself from his advances. They’re on a deserted road in the middle of nowhere, where he was planning to have his way with her, so when Meddy finds herself completely alone with a corpse, she panics and calls her mom and her mom’s three sisters. They immediately spring into auntie-action.

The Chans are also putting on a massive wedding at the same time, in a family business where Big Auntie bakes wedding cakes, Second Aunt does bridal makeup, Ma does the flowers, Fourth Auntie is a singer, and Meddy is the wedding photographer. They’ll need to hide the body, dispose of the body, concoct an alibi or five, and keep the massive wedding running smoothly. Oh, and there’s also a jewel heist, a surprise return of an ex and a surprise queer romance coming.

Meddy’s well-meaning aunties, their surprising resources in a crisis (Fourth Auntie’s  absinthe comes in a little too handy…), and the general high-drama of a massive wedding result in a ridiculous dark comedy with family loyalty at the heart.

Recommended for everyone, but especially for fans of lady heists, like in Pretty Things, over-the-top weddings, family dramas, and dark comedies in general. Also, if you like this one, read The Obsession and The New Girl.

 

ARC book review

Dial A for Aunties is written by Jesse Q. Sutanto and will be published by Berkley on April 27, 2021. Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the review copy, opinions are my own as always.

This is my Review of the Month for the review collection on LovelyAudiobooks.info

12 comments

  1. […] For more Singaporean foods, check out Sarong Party Girls and Crazy Rich Asians, for more twisted friendships and shocking suspense novels, check out Social Creature, The Girls Are All So Nice Here, Beware That Girl, or geez, most of what I’ve read since pandemic isolation started. Fans of Jesse Q Sutanto should also try her newest books, Dial A For Aunties. […]

  2. […] “Comparisons to Crazy Rich Asians are apt, as the author details the wild spending and luxurious lifestyles of the superrich. But this story is filled with mistaken identity, a gaggle of intoxicated groomsmen, five lovably hilarious sisters, and slapstick humor that leans more toward the film Clue. Readers will die for the delightfully absurd hijinks in this dark comedy.” KIRKUS “A ridiculous dark comedy with family loyalty at the heart.” FictionAddiciotn […]

  3. I can’t tell you how I managed to come across this book but I am glad I did. This is the perfect blend of what young people are dealing with in regards to social media, intergenerational families, and being multiple nationalities without being too serious. Sutanto tackles these topics with humor and lovable characters. I especially enjoyed learning more about Indo-Chinese marriage customs.

    Disclaimer: They do curse with some regularity in this book. Personally, I like it but if that’s something that bothers you you might want to skip this read.

  4. […] Dial A for Aunties, by the same author, was just a stunning read for me, I kept turning pages like No! That did NOT just happen! I can’t believe she went there! The blend of murder and meddling! The mashup of romance novel and dark comedy! It was just amazing. Then I liked Four Aunties and A Wedding (that’s Dial A for Aunties 2), Well, That Was Unexpected, and now Vera Wong just fine. These ones are more madcap adventures, after the mashup perfection for Dial A For Aunties, and you kind of have to roll with the low stakes and goofy fun.  In Vera Wong, readers won’t worry for a moment about catching the murderer, the success of Vera’s teashop, the romances, or anything bad happening to our characters.  Which is a perfectly good story — what if a nosy old lady bumped into a bunch of struggling young people and bossed them into success? Also, there’s dead body. There’s no real tension in this story, which doesn’t mean there are no surprises. […]

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