The key-note is passion: Manjari and her father, whom we meet through his diaries and the memories of those who survive him, know what physical passion is. They pay a high price for their knowledge; their once-happy family, composed of the parents and two daughters, is destined to be destroyed by it. Yet passion is also what lights them from within. By the end of the story, they become, the pair of them, like two small lanterns twinkling against the night of oblivion that awaits all mortal beings. The novel is peppered with deaths and tragedy, but this warm and deeply human light saves it from being either morbid or tiresome.