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The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy
The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy












The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy

In a cottage overlooking the windswept Maine coast, Wilder Harlow has begun the last book he will ever write. In the novel, Anjum survives an attack that is a loosely veiled rendering of this massacre.“If you love the novels of Shirley Jackson, Patricia Highsmith, and Tana French, here’s your next obsession.”-Kelly Link, author of White Cat, Black Dogįrom Catriona Ward, author of The Last House on Needless Street, comes a masterful story about friendship and betrayal, dark obsessions, and the impossibility of escaping your own story. In her collection of essays, My Seditious Heart-over a thousand pages long-Roy writes about the Gujarat massacre, in which hundreds of Muslim pilgrims were killed by Hindu extremists. Similarly, “The Silence is the Loudest Sound,” an opinion essay by Arundhati Roy published in The New York Times, addresses the Indian government’s decision to suspend certain citizens’ rights in Kashmir in order to make military occupation of the region easier.

The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy

The story exemplifies the ways in which foreign intervention in Kashmir contributes to the violence in the region, and more subtly treats the themes of corruption and capitalism that The Ministry of Utmost Happiness addresses.

The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy

counter-terrorism diplomat to the region who falls in love with Boonyi, Shalimar’s fiancé, and begins an affair with her. Shalimar the Clown by Salman Rushdie is another contemporary novel about the Kashmir conflict, in which Shalimar, the central character, joins various Jihadist groups to get the training he needs to kill all those he feels have wronged him. Roy is heavily critical of those on the Indian government’s side, and this comes through in her portrayal of the conflict in the novel. The bulk of the plot in The Ministry of Utmost Happiness has to do with characters involved on both sides of the Kashmiri fight for independence. Roy publicly supported the protestors and the Kashmiri fight for independence in an interview with The Times of India in 2008, and again in 2010 at a conference called “Azadi: The Only Way.” For her speech at the convention, Roy was charged with sedition, although she only served one day in jail. Kashmiri citizens were upset at their land being used for this without their consent, which inspired the protest. The demonstrations drew 500,000 to the streets of Srinagar on August 18, 2008, in response to the Indian government’s decision to use 99 acres of land in the Kashmir valley for temporary facilities for Hindu pilgrims to the majority-Muslim region. Roy first announced that she was writing another novel in 2007, shortly before massive protests in Kashmir for independence.














The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Arundhati Roy