The new novel covers two weeks in the life of an Indian consultant working in Rome and has been published in hardcover by Fourth Estate, the literary imprint of HarperCollins.
Krantik, the main character, is a paranoid hypochondriac and obsesses constantly about social media. With its fragmented writing style and edgy humour, the novel reflects the multiple worlds in which the young millennial generations live their lives.
The author describes Krantik as a modern-day Holden Caulfield, now in his mid-30s and living in a multi-cultural social-media-soaked world. The novel has drawn comparison to renowned authors in the stream-of-consciousness genre, with the publisher's blurb describing the book as a work where 'Jack Kerouac meets James Joyce'.
Barua has shifted significantly in terms of the narrative style and the themes he covers in his second novel.
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While "Windhorse" was a work of historical fiction featuring the Tibetan refugee community, spanning across many countries and decades in its narrative, "No Direction Rome" is a more in-depth psychological work, focusing on one character and using this examination as an unflinching commentary on the aspirations and fears of today's social-media-obsessed youth.
At the beginning of the novel, the narrator-protagonist Krantik is recovering from a failed relationship brought to an abrupt end by his fiancee's attempted suicide.
In Krantik's rants and reveries, he exposes the anxieties and hypocrisies of a rootless generation, the millennial generation. With people exchanging different versions of their lives on different social media (Facebook, Instagram) and living and experiencing their own lives through multiple fragmented images, he wonders if anyone even has a coherent sense of the self.