My Beloved Life
A novel
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- $13.99
Publisher 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.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Kumar (A Time Outside This Time) unfurls a majestic Indian family saga in successive bildungsroman narratives of a father and daughter. Jadu Kunwar, an 80-something history professor in Patna, remembers the moment his mother gave birth to him in 1935 in their small village. Bitten by a cobra during the delivery, she later points to her survival as an auspicious sign for Jadu's strength ("All the terrors that life held could not destroy you"). The remainder of Jadu's story underscores that sentiment as it recounts his coming-of-age, marriage, and the birth of his daughter, Jugnu. While Jugnu is a young girl in the 1960s, Jadu temporarily leaves Patna to attend UC Berkeley on a Fulbright scholarship, citing as his inspiration sherpa Tenzing Norgay, who climbed Mt. Everest to move from "misery to prosperity." In the novel's second part, set after Jadu's death in 2020, Jugnu, who is now a journalist in Atlanta, attempts to write his obituary. The occasion prompts her to reexamine the trajectory of her father's life from country boy to city man, and reflect on how it mirrors her own quest to reinvent herself by leaving Patna to study at Emory University. A stunning final chapter sheds new light on their stories with a revelation about their genealogy. Kumar excels at blending mysticism and a refined cosmopolitan perspective, and the twinned stories offer an intriguing testament to the book's epigraph, which comes from Janet Malcolm: "No story is told exactly the same way twice." Readers will find much to savor.