Kiran Desai’s first novel in nearly 20 years is shortlisted for the Booker. Last time, she won it
- Written by Vijay Mishra, Emeritus Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Murdoch University
Kiran Desai’s surname was familiar to the world of literature when her second novel, The Inheritance of Loss, won the Man Booker Prize in 2006. Her mother, Anita Desai, was already an accomplished novelist, who had been nominated for the Booker three times. The Inheritance of Loss was hailed as a defining example of both the postcolonial novel and the realist novel of the Indian diaspora: Indians living elsewhere, around the world.
The wait for her next novel – currently shortlisted for the 2025 Booker Prize – has been nearly 20 years. The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny is a globetrotting love story between two Indian-Americans, Sonia and Sunny. Sonia’s darkly disturbing relationship with Ilan, a modernist artist with devilish predatory powers, sets the context for the rest of the novel. Ilan’s narcissistic and oedipal leanings shadow Sonia and Sunny’s own search for love.
It’s a huge novel: epic in scope, complex in ideas and rich with interconnecting themes, generically fluid – and a very good read.
Review: The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny – by Kiran Desai (Hamish Hamilton)
Desai’s debut had many of these characteristics, too. It explored the sense of non-belonging in the Indian diaspora and the loss of liberal values in India itself, a homeland cursed by the spectre of casteism.
But despite its Booker win (and some critical acclaim), many readers felt its multiple narratives – revolutionaries in a Himalayan town, unethical capitalist practices among Indians in the United States, a general disdain towards Indians generally – displaced the central touching love tale, between Sai, a privileged Indian girl, and her tutor Gyan, a Nepali sympathetic to the Nepali insurgents (the Gorkha National Liberation Front).
The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny has multiple narrative strands, but they don’t overtake its central story, nor its central question. That is, how to fictionalise the task of representing two nations, which its characters both do and don’t belong to. (A central dilemma of both Indians and the Indian novel in the diaspora.)
For Desai, these nations are India, where she spent much of her childhood, and the US, where she moved with her mother as a teenager (after an initial year in the United Kingdom, where her mother had a Cambridge fellowship).
Not an unhappy family saga
The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny begins in America with two desi (literally “foreign-but-local”) characters. Sonia is a student at Hewitt, a minor college in Vermont, with a nebulous future as a creative writer (her writing is pedestrian and about Indian experiences). Sunny is a New York journalist with an equally uncertain future. Both are seeking a green card, to give them US residency.



















