Pulitzer Prize winner Jhumpa Lahiri's new novel "The Lowland", shortlisted for Britain's Man Booker Prize and longlisted for the US' National Book Award, is a story of fate and will, exile and return, of the price of idealism and of a love that can last long past death.
Set in Kolkata and Rhode Island in the US, "The Lowland" is about the lives of brothers Subhash and Udayan, their choices and their fate.
Born just 15 months apart, they are inseparable and are often mistaken for each other in the Kolkata neighbourhood where they grow up.
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"They were similar enough in build to draw from a single pile of clothes. Their complexions, a light coppery compound derived from their parents, were identical. Their double-jointed fingers, the sharp cut of their features, the wavy texture of their hair," the book, published by Random House India, says.
But they are opposites, with gravely different futures ahead. It is the 1960s, and the charismatic and impulsive Udayan finds himself drawn to the Naxalite movement.
It had begun in college, Lahiri says.
"There was always talk during labs, during meals at the canteen, about the country and all that was wrong with it. The stagnant economy, the deterioration of living standards. The latest rice shortage, pushing tens of thousands to the verge of starvation.
"He (Udayan) got to know some members of the Marxist student wing. They'd talked of the example of Vietnam. He started cutting classes, wandering with them through Calcutta. Visiting factories, visiting slums," the book says about Udayan's attraction to the movement.
"In 1966 they'd organised a strike at Presidency, over the maladministration of hostels. They'd demanded that the superintendent resign. They'd risked expulsion. They'd shut down all of Calcutta University, for 69 days.
"He'd gone to the countryside to further indoctrinate himself. He'd been instructed to move from place to place, to walk 15 miles each day before sundown. He met tenant farmers living in desperation. People who resorted to eating what they fed their animals. Children who ate one meal a day.