What does it mean to be "marriage material"?
Across cultures and centuries, women have been weighed, assessed, and found suitable or lacking - by families, by matrimonial algorithms, by the silent arithmetic of expectation. Marriage Material: The Unused Recipe is a searingly honest exploration of that inheritance.
Woven through with her grandmother Laxmi's handwritten recipe cards - slanting left, as though reaching toward something just out of frame - author Ambika traces the shape of a global condition. From India's matrimonial columns to Japan's ryōsai kenbo ideal, from Tehran apartments to the loneliness of modern dating apps, this book asks: what happens to the parts of a woman that cannot be counted?
Part memoir, part cultural investigation, part tribute to the women who resisted quietly and the ones who could not resist at all, Marriage Material is a book about what gets left behind - in recipe boxes, in silence, and in the bodies of women who were asked to be everything except themselves.
For readers who have ever been assessed. For the ones who laughed too freely. For the grandmothers who slanted left.