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Binding
Hardback
Number of Pages
356
Age Group
All
Language
English
Piracy Free
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Book Summary
This is a celebrated work of literary fiction that examines how love, memory, and tradition shape a family across generations. Aimed at adult readers who relish lush, precise prose and deep cultural insight, the tone is intimate, contemplative, and quietly powerful.
Set in Kerala, the narrative follows a family through decades of change, where personal longing collides with caste, class, and social expectations. The story unfolds with shifting timelines and a restrained, musical voice that reveals how small moments become defining over time.
The reading experience is immersive and reflective, built on sensory detail, evocative landscapes, and a powerful sense of memory. It invites readers to consider how history and love intertwine, leaving space for empathy, insight, and lingering questions.
Ending this journey, readers gain a deeper appreciation for human resilience and the quiet power of ordinary moments. The story lingers in the mind, expanding perspectives on love, family, and the social fabric that shapes us.
Product Details
Author
Arundhati Roy
Publisher
Penguin Random House
Number of Pages
356
Language
English
SKU
9780143028574
ISBN
9780143028574
Reading Age
All
Dimensions
19.6x12.4x2.4cm
Binding
Hardback
MRP: ₹ 499
₹ 425
₹ 74 Off
Arundhati Roy Is The Author Of The Novels The God Of Small Things, Which Won The Booker Prize In 1997, And The Ministry Of Utmost Happiness, Which Was Longlisted For The Booker Prize In 2017. She Is The Author Of Various Works Of Nonfiction Including My Seditious Heart, Azadi And, Most Recently, The Architecture Of Modern Empire. Arundhati Roy Is The Author Of A Number Of Books, Including The God Of Small Things, Which Won The Booker Prize In 1997 And Has Been Translated Into More Than Forty Languages. She Was Born In 1959 In Shillong, India, And Studied Architecture In Delhi, Where She Now Lives. She Has Also Written Several Non-Fiction Books, Including Field Notes On Democracy, Walking With The Comrades, Capitalism: A Ghost Story, The End Of Imagination, And Most Recently Things That Can And Cannot Be Said, Co-Authored With John Cusack. Roy Is The Recipient Of The 2002 Lannan Foundation Cultural Freedom Prize, The 2011 Norman Mailer Prize For Distinguished Writing, And The 2015 Ambedkar Sudar Award.