Anjali Bose is "Miss New India." Born into a traditional lower-middle class family and living in a backwater town with an arranged marriage on the horizon, Anjali’s prospects don’t look
great. But her ambition, charm, and fluency in language do not go unnoticed by her charismatic and influential expat teacher, Peter Champion. And champion her he does, both to other powerful
people who can help her along the way and to Anjali herself, stirring in her a desire to take charge of her own destiny.
So she sets off to Bangalore, India’s fastest growing major metropolis, and quickly falls in with an audacious and ambitious crowd of young people, who have learned how to sound American by
watching shows like Seinfeld in order to get jobs as call center service agents, where they are quickly able to out-earn their parents. And it is in this high-tech city where Anjali—suddenly
free from the traditional confines of class, caste, gender, and more—is able to confront her past and reinvent herself. Of course, the seductive pull of modernity does not come without a dark
side and it is those inherent dangers, which threaten Anjali’s transformation at every turn . . .