From new novels by Arundhati Roy and Jeet Thayil to a translation of an 1857 eyewitness memoir, from the Nanavati case and a definitive investigation of Osama bin Laden to a fabulous history of spices, 2017 offers a range of eclectic reading. Nilanjana S Roy picks the best of the lot:
The Exile
ADRIAN LEVY AND CATHERINE SCOTT-CLARK
Bloomsbury
From the authors of The Meadow and The Siege, this promises to be another unforgettable work of investigative journalism, as they follow Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda in the years after 9/11. Neither Levy nor Scott-Clark ever lose sight of the human element, as they take the reader inside that house in Abbottabad, into the workings of torture chambers and terror organisations.
The Unwomanly Face of War: An Oral History of Women in World War II
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SVETLANA ALEXIEVICH, TRANSLATED BY RICHARD PEVEAR AND LARISSA VOLOKHONSKY
Penguin RandomHouse
Men Without Women
HARUKI MURAKAMI
Penguin RandomHouse
A cat walks into a bar; Scheherazade, so unremarkable you would pass her by on the street, continues to tell stories; a boy puts new lyrics to an old Beatles number in Kansai dialect. This collection of Murakami stories, a few familiar to New Yorker readers, won’t disappoint his fans. The title is intriguing — Hemingway used it for a collection of his own stories, but Murakami places his stamp on it with these sketches of loneliness and men trying, unsuccessfully, to outrun their own feelings.
Exit West
MOHSIN HAMID
Penguin RandomHouse
“I wanted this to be a novel about refugees that reminded us we’re all refugees,” Mohsin Hamid said to John Freeman in an interview. The unnamed country in his novel might well be Pakistan, but it could be shorthand for any nation that has been overrun by violence, the politics of fear, and a climate of repression. His protagonists, Nadia and Saeed, become refugees, first in Greece, then in London and San Francisco, stuck between a world suspicious of migrants, freedom offered with thorns attached, and wanting escape from “being stifled” in the place of your birth for your entire life.
The Golden Legend
NADEEM ASLAM
Faber & Faber
In his fifth novel, Nadeem Aslam writes directly into the heart of contemporary Pakistan. Nargis, a successful architect, lives with her husband next door to Christian neighbours in the city of Zamana. Her husband is killed in a public shootout; the mystery of who might be behind inflammatory broadcasts from the city’s mosques deepens; and for the survivors, all of their lives are ringed by risk and danger. Aslam scores by keeping the focus on individuals in a time of extreme political chaos, in this ambitious, uneven but beautiful novel.
Hit Refresh
SATYA NADELLA
HarperCollins
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness
ARUNDHATI ROY
HamishHamilton
The Book of Chocolate Saints
JEET THAYIL
Aleph
The Nanavati Case
BACHI KARKARIA
Juggernaut
In 1959, Commander K M Nanavati dropped his wife, Sylvia, and their children to Metro cinema. He went from the cinema to the home of Prem Ahuja, his wife’s lover, and after a brief conversation, shot his former friend dead. Nanavati was convicted for murder, but won the public’s sympathy during the trial, which was also the last jury trial in India. Karkaria investigates what became of Commander Nanavati, explores the Bombay of that age, and asks why the Nanavati case still exerts such fascination on the popular imagination.
The Flavour of Spice: Journeys, Stories, Recipes
MARRYAM RESHII
Hachette
In 25 years of writing and cooking, Marryam Reshii’s passion for food and everything to do with the kitchen has sent her on the trail of Indian chefs, home cooks and new and old spice and vegetable markets. The Flavour of Spice promises to be a fabulous and definitive history of spices, shifting from saffron plantations in Iran to explorations of black cardamom in Sikkim, told by one of the country’s most inquiring and open-minded food writers.
A Memorial
HANSDA SOWVENDRA SHEKHAR
Speaking Tiger
Hansda Sowvendra Shekhar’s first collection of short stories, The Adivasi Will Not Dance, drew from his experiences working as a doctor in Jharkhand. His second book and first novel, A Memorial, explores the relationship between a Santhal father and son split by their personal and political differences, and promises to be one of the most interesting works of Indian fiction in 2017.
Dastan-e-Ghadar – The Tale of the Mutiny
ZAHIR DEHLVI, TRANSLATED BY RANA SAFVI
Penguin RandomHouse
Zahir Dehlvi was a promising poet at the time of the war of 1857, and spent the years afterwards in temporary exile from the city, seeking employment in Sonepat and Bareilly, among other places. This translation brings his memoir of living through both the last days of the Mughal court and the slaughter and violence that accompanied the siege. “All the wells of Kucha Chelan are filled with bodies,” he wrote of the massacre of some of the city’s most prominent writers and ordinary citizens, “My pen dare not write any more.” This is a timely translation, commemorating the 160th anniversary of the first major uprising against the British in India.