Most people know Arundhati Roy as a novelist and she has written beautiful books such as The God Of Small Things which won the Booker Prize in 1997. But she is also known for her essays and her political writing. She has also worked on several movies as a scriptwriter. This is her memoir, the story of her life.
Roy grew up in poverty, her father never in the picture and her single mother not supported by the family. She had one brother. But her mother, who is tornadic in personality force, wasn't content for that to be her life. She started a school and made it one of the best in that area of India. She was honored for her work in education.
But her skills as a mother were definitely lacking. She seemed to hate her children, abusing them physically and emotionally. She had impossibly high expectations of them and was ruthless in her scorn and blame when they didn't meet those expectations. Roy left home for good at eighteen. She said that it wasn't because she didn't love her mother but that she left so that she could continue to love her mother. She put herself through university and has a degree as an architect.
Readers will learn of her life in the university, the friends and contacts she made there and her love for architecture. They will learn of the love of her life, who was married to someone Roy worked with but the marriage dissolved and Roy lived with him the majority of their lives. They will also learn about her jobs over the years, her political work and her determination to live the life that she had dreamed about. This book is recommended for memoir readers for a fascinating life and for literary fiction readers to see what Roy's influences were and how they played out in her novels.



















