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The Earthspinner

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From the critically acclaimed, Booker Prize-nominated author of Sleeping on Jupiter and All the Lives We Never Lived, an incisive and moving novel about the struggle for creative achievement in a world consumed by growing fanaticism and political upheaval.

One night, Elango has a dream that consumes him, driving him to give it shape. The potter is determined to create a terracotta horse whose beauty will be reason enough for its existence. Yet he cannot pin down from where it has galloped into his mind. The Mahabharata? The Trojan horse legend? His anonymous potter-ancestors? Once it's finished, he does not know where his creation will belong. In a temple compound? Gracing a hotel lobby? Or should he gift it to Zohra, the woman he loves, yet despairs of ever marrying.

The astral, indefinable force driving Elango toward forbidden love and creation has unleashed other currents. He unexpectedly falls into a complicated relationship with a neighborhood girl who is beginning her bewildering journey into adulthood. He is suddenly adopted by a lost dog who steals his heart. While Elango's life is changing, the community around him is as well, but it is a transformation driven by inflammatory passions of a different kind. Here, people, animals, and even the gods live on a knife's edge and the consequences of daring to dream are cataclysmic.

Moving between India and England, The Earthspinner reflects the many ways in which the East and the West's paths converge and diverge in constant conflict. Anuradha Roy breathes new life into ancient myths, giving allegorical shape to the terrifying war on reason and the imagination waged by increasingly powerful forces of fanaticism. An epic that is a metaphor for our age, The Earthspinner is an intricate, wrenching novel about the transformed ways of loving and living in an increasingly uncertain world.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 30, 2022
      The art of pottery looms large in Roy’s latest, a novel of small tragedies (after All the Lives We Never Lived). Narrator Sara, a lonely Indian student on scholarship at a damp English university, seeks solace in a pottery studio in the basement of a local church. It is clear early on, however, that the story belongs to Sara’s teacher, Elango, a gifted Hindu potter. Years earlier in India, when Sara was a child there, Elango begins work on a beautiful terra-cotta horse after a vivid dream, and in the meantime has fallen in love with Zohra, the Muslim granddaughter of a blind calligrapher. But Elango’s finished work of art, which has been decorated with Urdu poetry written by Zohra’s grandfather, causes an explosion of violent religious animosity, and Elango and Zohra are forced to flee to Delhi together, leaving behind a beloved dog named Chinna with Sara’s family, thus binding the characters to one another. Roy delivers profound insights on the power of art (“Work with whatever earth you get,” Elango tells Sara. “A potter knows how to do that”), the hideous nature of religious intolerance, and perhaps most sadly, the consequences of pursuing a dream. This is Roy’s best to date.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 15, 2022
      Life as a newly arrived student in England feels unmoored to Sara (Sarayu), especially because her past casts a long shadow. Roy (All the Lives We Never Lived, 2018) interrupts Sara's narrative abroad to recount her childhood in India, forged by guilt. Elango, a Hindu potter who ferries Sara and her sister to school and back, is a family fixture. When Elango adopts Chinna, a dog he can ill afford, Sara's family helps with Chinna's care. But when Elango falls in love with Zohra, a Muslim woman, even Sara's family cannot protect the couple from societal wrath. Sara is convinced she is to blame. Roy's multilayered novel evokes the craft of pottery with a gentle touch while rendering a moving depiction of the power of guilt. When fresh clay is soft enough to hold an impression, it can be transformed. The same applies to Sara. Pivotal childhood moments might unspool at the periphery, but they are strong enough to forge Sara's character forever. "My father would have said change was the work of the earth spinning, spinning as it always had," Sara remembers. As she eventually discovers, change can deliver closure, but not without a trace of melancholy.

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