The God of Small Things
Book description
'They all broke the rules. They all crossed into forbidden territory. They all tampered with the laws that lay down who should be loved, and how. And how much.'
This is the story of Rahel and Estha, twins growing up among the banana vats and peppercorns of their blind grandmother's…
Why read it?
6 authors picked The God of Small Things as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
As a sucker for beautiful writing, this book had me from the first page, and I couldn’t put it down. So many issues that had been part of my childhood culture resonated with me while it also showed me many others from a part of India that I had never even visited.
Though sweeping in its scope, it drills down into a very human story with all its pain and love. It weaves myth, story, real life, love, loss, and the meaning of family. It was one of the first novels by an Indian woman that transcended cultures, gender, and…
From Jawahara's list on transporting you across time and place.
This book is as close to home for me as it gets. It won the Booker when I was in high school but I wouldn’t read it before college because I was told – wrongly – by someone who lacked an imagination that they found it opaque.
I was happy to find that it shone with beautiful clarity when I finally read it. I haven’t trusted random people’s book recommendations ever since. The extreme contradictions – the most progressive and the most regressive, revolution and complacency – and their uncanny coexistence in Kerala society and politics can only emerge in…
From Maithreyi's list on striking while the ‘irony’ is hot.
A friend recommended it as her favourite-ever book. My daughter declared it “some literary bulls*t” (in the most complimentary way). So how on earth do I describe The God of Small Things? I love it for its intricate, scattered-pieces-of-a-puzzle plotting, its vivid and unconventional language (channeled through the minds of children), and the immersion in a southern Indian culture and setting.
This is not a page-turning read, but it is beautiful, tragic, and unforgettable.
If you love The God of Small Things...
I hadn’t been to India when first I read this.
But when I did go to Kerala, I thought I’d been there already, because it’s so exactly as Roy describes it. She had taken me there already by word.
That’s the journey I want my readers to be able to take.
Camus said that ‘fiction is the lie through which we tell the truth’ and by that measure this is the most dazzling, intelligent, colourful and complex of ‘lies’ telling the truth about injustice, the caste system, the agony of history, and misogyny.
From Nicola's list on taking you where you can’t go.
The God of Small Things is a beautiful book filled with multi-layered characters, compelling prose as lyrical as poetry and complex, heart-breaking themes. The hint of an unknown threat looming over the story adds a melancholic tone to this book about post-colonial India. Perhaps that’s why this book resonated so deeply with me – because here too, in post-colonial and post-apartheid South Africa, our small lives are shadowed by larger forces than we can comprehend and yet hope and the beauty of love echo throughout our land. Switching timelines from present to past, often speaking in a “special” language, Roy’s…
From Judy's list on where the world is filled with mystical phenomena.
I read this book while at university and I was wowed by the language, the story, the sheer beauty of it. It covers such disparate themes, makes such important points but never at the expense of the story. Just beautiful. It was the first book I read by an Indian Booker prize winner and it inspired me – I think until then although I had always secretly wanted to be a writer, I never thought I would actually do it. This book made me ask myself, why not?
From Renita's list on featuring multicultural characters and themes.
If you love Arundhati Roy...
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