Indian AuthorBooker Prize WinnerPolitical ActivistThe God of Small ThingsMother Mary Comes to MePEN Pinter Prize
Arundhati Roy — Books, Biography & Author Overview
Booker Prize 1997 · PEN Pinter Prize 2024 · The God of Small Things · Mother Mary Comes to Me
Known for: The God of Small Things, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, Mother Mary Comes to MeGenre: Literary Fiction · Memoir · Political Non-Fiction · EssayBased in: New Delhi, India
BookerPrize 1997
PEN PinterPrize 2024
40+Languages
NBCC Award2025
DebutNovel 1997
Browse Arundhati Roy Books on BookMandee
AR
Indian Author
Literary Fiction & Non-Fiction
Arundhati Roy — In Short
Arundhati Roy is one of the most celebrated and most controversial Indian writers of her generation — and one of the most important literary voices anywhere in the world. Her debut novel, The God of Small Things (1997), won the Booker Prize — making her the first Indian woman to receive the honour — and has since been translated into more than 40 languages and read by millions. In the two decades that followed, she put fiction aside and devoted herself to political activism and non-fiction, writing with unflinching force on nuclear policy, the rights of the displaced, corporate globalisation, and the Indian state. Her second novel, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, arrived in 2017, followed by her celebrated debut memoir, Mother Mary Comes to Me (2025), which won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Autobiography. She was awarded the PEN Pinter Prize in 2024 for her decades of courageous literary and political work.
What Makes Arundhati Roy Stand Out as an Author?
A prose style unlike any other — Roy's sentences are architectural, musical, and emotionally precise all at once; her language does things that few writers in any language can match
Two entirely different careers in one life — A Booker Prize-winning novelist who then spent two decades as a political essayist and activist, before returning to fiction and memoir without losing any of her voice or power
Kerala as a literary universe — From the Ayemenem of The God of Small Things to the landscape of Mother Mary Comes to Me, Roy has created an entire world from one small place — as Faulkner did with Mississippi, as Hardy did with Wessex
Fiction and reality inseparable — Her novels draw so deeply from her own life and India's political realities that the line between autobiography, activism, and fiction is productively blurred throughout her work
💡Roy received a £500,000 advance for The God of Small Things — an extraordinary sum for a debut novel by an unknown writer in 1997. The book went on to justify every rupee of that faith.
About Arundhati Roy — Biography
Arundhati Roy was born on 24 November 1959 in Shillong, Meghalaya, to a Bengali Hindu father and a Syrian Christian mother — Mary Roy, who would later become one of the most important figures in her daughter's life and work. She grew up in Ayemenem, a small town in Kerala that would become the setting of her first novel, and left home at eighteen to study architecture in Delhi at the School of Planning and Architecture.
After graduating, she worked as a production designer and screenwriter — writing the screenplays for In Which Annie Gives It Those Ones (1989) and Electric Moon (1992). But the novel she had been writing for four years — about twin children in Kerala, a forbidden love story, and a single catastrophic day — consumed her entirely. The God of Small Things was published in 1997 and won the Booker Prize that same year, transforming Roy from an unknown writer into a global literary phenomenon almost overnight.
In the years that followed, Roy chose not to write another novel — a deliberate and widely discussed decision. Instead, she wrote and spoke with enormous force on some of India's most contested political questions: the Narmada dam displacement, India's nuclear tests, the war in Afghanistan, the rights of Kashmiris, and the treatment of Adivasi and Dalit communities by the Indian state. Her non-fiction collections — including The Algebra of Infinite Justice and Listening to Grasshoppers — were as widely read as many novels.
Her second novel, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, was published in 2017 and longlisted for the Booker Prize. In 2025, she published her first memoir, Mother Mary Comes to Me, written in the aftermath of her mother Mary Roy's death — a book that won the National Book Critics Circle Award and was named one of the New York Times Top Ten Books of 2025. In 2024, she received the PEN Pinter Prize, awarded to a writer who "casts an unflinching, unswerving gaze upon the world." She lives in New Delhi.
✍️Roy has faced legal proceedings in India multiple times for her political writings and public statements — including a charge of contempt of court in 2001 for her essay on the Narmada dam. Each time, she has refused to be silenced. This combination of literary brilliance and personal courage defines her public profile as much as her books.
Books by Arundhati Roy
Book
Year
Type
Why It's Notable
The God of Small Things
1997
Fiction
Booker Prize winner; one of the greatest Indian novels ever written; translated into 40+ languages
The Greater Common Good
1999
Non-Fiction / Essay
Her landmark essay on the Narmada dam and displacement — the opening salvo of her political writing career
The Algebra of Infinite Justice
2002
Non-Fiction / Essays
Collection of essays on war, globalisation, and democracy in the post-9/11 world
An Ordinary Person's Guide to Empire
2004
Non-Fiction / Essays
Wide-ranging essays on US imperialism, the Iraq War, and corporate power
Listening to Grasshoppers
2009
Non-Fiction / Essays
Essays on India's democracy, fascism, and the Indian state's treatment of minorities
Broken Republic
2011
Non-Fiction / Essays
Three essays on the Maoist insurgency and its roots in the displacement of Adivasi communities
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness
2017
Fiction
Her second novel after a 20-year gap; longlisted for the Booker Prize; sweeping and politically urgent
My Seditious Heart
2019
Non-Fiction / Essays
Collected non-fiction spanning two decades of political writing; an essential companion to her novels
Azadi: Freedom. Fascism. Fiction.
2020
Non-Fiction / Essays
Essays on freedom, the revocation of Article 370 in Kashmir, and the role of fiction in political life
Mother Mary Comes to Me
2025
Memoir
Her debut memoir; NBCC Award winner 2025; NYT Top Ten 2025; a portrait of her mother Mary Roy and herself
Arundhati Roy's Writing Style — What to Expect
Lyrical, inventive prose — Roy plays with capitalisation, syntax, and sentence rhythm in ways that feel musical rather than merely literary; her style is instantly recognisable
Non-linear storytelling — Her fiction circles around its central tragedies rather than marching toward them, mirroring the way traumatic memory actually works
Political urgency without didacticism — Both her fiction and non-fiction carry enormous political conviction, but never at the cost of character, humanity, or complexity
The specific as universal — A story about one family in one village in Kerala becomes a story about caste, love, colonialism, and the human condition; Roy always thinks at multiple scales simultaneously
💡Roy spent four years writing The God of Small Things. She has said in interviews that she wrote the last page first — she knew where the book was going before she knew how it would get there. That structural mastery is visible on every page.
Why Is Arundhati Roy So Celebrated?
The God of Small Things is one of the most extraordinary debut novels in literary history — lyrical, political, formally inventive, and emotionally devastating
She is one of very few writers anywhere who has produced work of equal power in both fiction and political non-fiction
Her political courage — continuing to write and speak under legal pressure and public hostility — has made her a figure of moral as well as literary importance
Mother Mary Comes to Me (2025) proved that even after decades away from memoir, she could produce a work of immediate and lasting significance
Her books are essential reading in universities worldwide — generating a steady, multi-generational readership that ensures her work remains in active circulation
She represents a model of what a writer can be — not just a storyteller, but a witness, an activist, and a conscience
How Readers See Arundhati Roy
✍️
A writer whose prose is studied and quoted as much as it is read — one of the most distinctive literary voices of the last 30 years
🔥
A political voice that divides and compels in equal measure — impossible to read without having an opinion, which is exactly the point
📚
Among the most consistently resold Indian authors — The God of Small Things in particular circulates endlessly in used-book markets
Arundhati Roy vs Similar Indian Literary Authors
Author
Tone & Style
Best For
Key Difference from Arundhati Roy
Arundhati Roy
Lyrical, political, formally inventive
Readers of serious literary fiction and political writing with exceptional prose
—
Amitav Ghosh
Scholarly, expansive, historically grounded
Readers of historical fiction and climate non-fiction
Ghosh more epic and historical in scope; Roy more personal, lyrical, and politically urgent
Kiran Desai
Darkly comic, postcolonial, family-centred
Readers of Booker Prize-winning Indian literary fiction
Desai similarly lyrical; Roy more politically direct and formally experimental
Jhumpa Lahiri
Quiet, precise, emotionally restrained
Readers of diaspora and identity fiction
Lahiri more restrained and domestic; Roy more politically charged and stylistically bold
Avni Doshi
Unsettling, psychological, mother-daughter
Readers of recent Indian literary fiction on women's inner lives
Doshi more psychologically intimate; Roy grander in scope and more overtly political
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FAQs About Arundhati Roy
Arundhati Roy is an Indian author, essayist, and political activist born in 1959 in Shillong and raised in Kerala. She is best known as the author of The God of Small Things (1997), which won the Booker Prize — making her the first Indian woman to receive the honour. She has also written extensively on Indian political issues and published a debut memoir, Mother Mary Comes to Me, in 2025, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award for Autobiography.
Arundhati Roy has written two novels: The God of Small Things (1997) and The Ministry of Utmost Happiness (2017). There was a 20-year gap between the two, during which she devoted herself to political non-fiction and activism. She published her first memoir, Mother Mary Comes to Me, in 2025.
The God of Small Things is set in Ayemenem, Kerala, and tells the story of fraternal twins Rahel and Estha, whose childhood is destroyed by a single catastrophic event in 1969. At its core it is about a forbidden love between the twins' mother Ammu and Velutha — a man from the Untouchable caste — and the consequences of that love in a society governed by rigid rules about who can love whom. It won the Booker Prize in 1997.
Mother Mary Comes to Me (2025) is Roy's first memoir — written after the death of her mother, Mary Roy, in September 2022. It traces Roy's life from her childhood in Ayemenem through her architectural studies, the writing of The God of Small Things, and her political activism, all filtered through her complex relationship with her mother — a pioneering feminist activist who won a landmark Supreme Court case on inheritance rights for Syrian Christian women.
Most of Arundhati Roy's books in India are published by Penguin Random House India, often under the Hamish Hamilton imprint — including The God of Small Things, The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, and Mother Mary Comes to Me. Her non-fiction collections are also published by Penguin India.
Start with The God of Small Things — it is the essential Arundhati Roy experience, and one of the most extraordinary novels you will ever read. If you want to explore her non-fiction, The Algebra of Infinite Justice is the ideal entry point into her political essays. For memoir, Mother Mary Comes to Me (2025) is her most recent and most personal work — and best read alongside or after The God of Small Things.
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