:IMAGE.half | :INFO.half The God of Small Things Roy circles the tragedy from every direction before she lets you see it directly. By then you already love everyone it is going to destroy. | :INFO The Love Laws Arundhati Roy's 1997 debut novel follows the Ipe family in the Kerala backwaters of India across two timelines, the present and a terrible summer in 1969, as we piece together the events that shattered twins Rahel and Estha. At the centre is a love between their mother Ammu and an Untouchable carpenter named Velutha that breaks what Roy calls the Love Laws, the laws that dictate who may be loved, and how, and how much. Roy won the Booker Prize in 1997 and donated much of the prize money to political causes. She remains one of India's most outspoken public intellectuals. :JOURNEY Reading The God of Small Things 3 Displaced 3 Oppressive 4 Tense 4 Tender 5 Catastrophic 5 Gutting :QUOTE [quotetype:plain, subtitle:Arundhati Roy] The worst thing that can happen to a person is to be forgotten while still alive. :NOTE.half Roy wrote the novel over four years in a small rented room in Delhi. She sold the rights in a bidding war for $500,000, at the time the largest advance ever paid for a first novel by an unknown author. | :NOTE.half The novel was almost banned in India after publication, with obscenity charges filed in Kerala. The charges were eventually dismissed but the controversy drove sales and cemented the novel's canonical status. :LINK https://www.google.com/search?q=The+God+of+Small+Things+Arundhati+Roy+book Find a copy near you