My Beloved Life
A novel
Description
An exceptionally moving novel that traces the arc of a man's life, starting from his 1935 birth in a small village in India.
Jadunath Kunwar's beginnings are humble, even inauspicious. His mother, while pregnant, nearly dies from a cobra bite. And this is only the first of many challenges in store for Jadu. As his life skates between the mythical and the mundane, Jadu finds meaning in the most unexpected places. He meets the sherpa who first summited Everest. He befriends poets and politicians. He becomes a historian. And he has a daughter, Jugnu, a television journalist with a career in the United States--whose perspective sheds new light on Jadu.
All the while, currents of huge change sweep across India--from Independence to Partition, Gandhi to Modi, the Mahabharata to Somerset Maugham, cholera to covid--and buffet both Jadu and Jugnu's lives.
Piercing, fleet-footed, and undeniably resonant, here is a novel from a singularly gifted writer about how we tell stories and write history, how individuals play a counterpoint to big movements, how no single life is without consequence.
About this Author
AMITAVA KUMAR is a writer and journalist. He was born in Ara, India, and grew up in the nearby town of Patna, famous for its corruption, crushing poverty, and delicious mangoes. Kumar is the author of Immigrant, Montana as well as several other books of nonfiction and fiction. In 2016, Kumar was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship (General Nonfiction) as well as a Ford Fellowship in Literature from United States Artists. He lives in Poughkeepsie, in upstate New York, where he is a Helen D. Lockwood Professor of English at Vassar College.
Reviews
One of The New Yorker's Best Books of 2024
Praise for My Beloved Life:
"This profound book is full of lives whose beauty lies in the wholeness of their telling. A father, a daughter, a crime, a country being born, a migration, another country, a plague. 'We are in touch with a great astonishing mystery when we put honest words down on paper to register a life and to offer witness. Everything else is ordinary,' Kumar writes. His novel offers magnificent witness, and is not ordinary but extraordinary."
--Salman Rushdie, New York Times bestselling author of Victory City
"What makes a life? My Beloved Life addresses this most fundamental of questions with all of Amitava Kumar's trademark wisdom and wit. A novel of vaulting ambition and tenderness, about how histories, both personal and national, are built, refracted and revised."
--Katie Kitamura, author of Intimacies
"Extraordinary. . . . A deeply moving book that's both modern and timeless: it could only have been written in our age of migration and yet at the same time captures eternal, private bonds of family. Wonderful."
--Joseph O'Neill, author of Godwin
"My Beloved Life is storytelling at its best. . . . A moving collection of memories and experiences entangled with world history. . . . Imagine finding yourself in the company of a stranger. A simple hello organically morphs into hours of conversation, full of resonating and enlightening stories. This is the feeling one gets while reading My Beloved Life."
--BookPage (starred review)
"An immersive, moving portrait that steadily gains intensity, vividness, and surprise. . . . It pays tribute to two people who make noticing, attentiveness, and storytelling the central pillars of their lives."
--Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
"Kumar unfurls a majestic Indian family saga in successive bildungsroman narratives of a father and daughter. . . . A stunning final chapter sheds new light on their stories . . . Kumar excels at blending mysticism and a refined cosmopolitan perspective. . . . Readers will find much to savor."
--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"The novel feels like flicking through a photo album, every anecdote . . . recorded and remembered. . . . Kumar's narrative reimagines human history, embracing where it falters and where it persists."
--The Indian Express
"Above all, [Amitava Kumar] new novel is deeply human; the heart is everywhere in these pages. It is easily the best thing Kumar has written. . . . Its astonishing details sit in the text like little coiled stories, pointedly revealed but not overpoweringly unpacked by the writer. . . . Kumar's details have the vitality of invention and the resonance of the real. . . . His beautiful, truthful fiction rings with all the gratitude and anticipated grief that he expressed in 2002, in Bombay London New York, when both of his parents were still alive. . . . This novel finds and provides great strength--too late for Kumar's parents, but in good time for his grateful readers."
--The New Yorker
"Kumar is an observer to his core. He successfully enumerates the many forces and influences that shape an individual life."
--The New York Times Book Review
"Gripping. . . . The seething, heaving story of modern India's coming-of-age is as much the meat of Kumar's social realist project as the lives of its two central protagonists."
--Daily Mail
"Kumar seamlessly juxtaposes historical events with the everyday concerns of his characters . . . and renders it all in such masterful prose that the ordinary becomes extraordinary."
--California Review of Books
"A near-irresistible Indian family saga. . . . Both ambitious in its scope and deeply personal."
--Bookmunch
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