SUNJEEV SAHOTA was born in 1981 in Derbyshire and lives in Sheffield with his wife and children.
The Year of the Runaways
Paperback
- ISBN-13: 9781101911884
- Publisher: Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
- Publication date: 02/21/2017
- Pages: 512
- Sales rank: 386,871
- Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 7.80(h) x 1.00(d)
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Short-listed for the 2015 Man Booker Prize
The Guardian: The Best Novels of 2015
The Independent: Literary Fiction of the Year 2015
From one of Granta’s Best of Young British Novelists and Man Booker Prize nominee Sunjeev Sahota—a sweeping, urgent contemporary epic, set against a vast geographical and historical canvas, astonishing for its richness and texture and scope, and for the utter immersiveness of its reading experience.
Three young men, and one unforgettable woman, come together in a journey from India to England, where they hope to begin something new—to support their families; to build their futures; to show their worth; to escape the past. They have almost no idea what awaits them.
In a dilapidated shared house in Sheffield, Tarlochan, a former rickshaw driver, will say nothing about his life in Bihar. Avtar and Randeep are middle-class boys whose families are slowly sinking into financial ruin, bound together by Avtar’s secret. Randeep, in turn, has a visa wife across town, whose cupboards are full of her husband’s clothes in case the immigration agents surprise her with a visit.
She is Narinder, and her story is the most surprising of them all.
The Year of the Runaways unfolds over the course of one shattering year in which the destinies of these four characters become irreversibly entwined, a year in which they are forced to rely on one another in ways they never could have foreseen, and in which their hopes of breaking free of the past are decimated by the punishing realities of immigrant life.
A novel of extraordinary ambition and authority, about what it means and what it costs to make a new life—about the capaciousness of the human spirit, and the resurrection of tenderness and humanity in the face of unspeakable suffering.
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Lyrical and incisive, Sahota’s Booker-shortlisted novel is a considerable achievement: a restrained, lucid, and heartbreaking exploration of the lives of three young Indian men, and one British-Indian woman, as their paths converge in Sheffield, England, over the course of one perilous year. In India, Avtar Nijjar, unfairly fired from his job as a bus conductor, is engaging in a secret relationship with Lakhpreet Sanghera, the teenage daughter of a neighboring family. When Lakhpreet’s 19-year-old brother, Randeep, is forced to abandon his education, and their government-employee father suffers a mental breakdown, Randeep is sent to England to make enough money to keep the family afloat. Lakhpreet arranges for Avtar to accompany him, although Avtar must sell a kidney and accept a predatory loan to afford a student visa, while Randeep travels on a marriage visa. His bride is the London-born Sikh Narinder Kaur, whose desire to help the desperate Randeep runs counter to her family’s pious religiosity and her impending arranged marriage. Rounding out the cast is the 19-year-old Dalit Tochi Kumar, arriving in England illegally after his entire family is massacred by radical Hindu nationalists. Quarrelling, parting, and finding solace in one another in unexpected ways, Sahota’s characters are wonderfully drawn, and imbued with depth and feeling. Their struggles to survive will remain vividly imprinted on the reader’s mind. (Mar.)
"No recent novel does a more powerful job capturing the day-to-day lives of immigrants than "The Year of the Runaways," which was shortlisted for the 2015 Man Booker prize... Mr. Sahota... has an instinctive sense of storytelling, immersing us in the dilemmas of his characters... Writing with unsentimental candor, Mr. Sahota has created a cast of characters whose lives are so richly imagined that this deeply affecting novel calls out for a sequel or follow-up that might recount the next installment of their lives."
— Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times
“The Grapes of Wrath for the 21st Century… America's fresh spasm of xenophobia makes this devastating story about the plight of immigrants all the more relevant now . . . Relentless . . . Absorbing . . . The great marvel of this book is its absolute refusal to grasp at anything larger than the hopes and humiliations of these few marginal people . . . The story’s momentum feels absolutely overwhelming . . . Read this novel.”
—Ron Charles, The Washington Post
“Mr. Sahota’s masterly immigrant saga . . . powerfully reminds us of just what immigrants seek in the West . . . Absorbing, highly textured . . . The Year of the Runaways is a poignant exploration of the fate of friendship and goodness in a frontier world . . . Superb.”
—Sam Sacks, The Wall Street Journal
"Immersive... Sahota is a clear-eyed, unflinching storyteller, switching seamlessly between the characters' desperate present circumstances and the crises at home that lead to their migration. The book is a major achievement, a compassionate tale about the cruelties of twenty-first century immigrant life."
—The New Yorker
"A unique reading experience...get lost in this sprawling, stunning novel."
—Malcolm Forbes, Minneapolis Star Tribune
"[Sahota's] powerful recent novel, The Year of the Runaways is a striking exception to the kind of bourgeois cosmopolitanism with which the literature (and academic literary criticism) of the professional South-Asian diaspora is identified"
—Los Angeles Review of Books
"An intensely immersive story that, through its forthrightness, shines light on the harsh realities of undocumented immigration...Ambitious in everything it tackles... The novel prevails not only in the power of its myriad messages but also in the experience of reading it."
—The Harvard Crimson
Praise from the U.K. for The Year of the Runaways:
"All you can do is surrender, happily, to its power."
—Salman Rushdie
"A brilliant political novel, deeply felt, told in the most intimate of ways...Sahota knows how to turn a phrase, how to light up a scene, how to make you stay up late to learn what happens next. This is a novel that takes on the largest questions and still shines in its smallest details...a brilliant and beautiful novel."
—Kamila Shamsie, The Guardian
"A novel of great moral intelligence...deeply impressive."
—Claire Lowdon, The Sunday Times
"Sahota proves a wonderfully evocative storyteller...fascinating...the real thing."
—Mihir Bose, The Independent
"Should be compulsory reading. A magnificent achievement."
—John Harding, Daily Mail
"The best novel of the year....judges of forthcoming literary prizes need look no further."
—Cressida Connolly, The Spectator
"A rich, intricate, beautifully written novel, bursting and seething with energy"
—Kate Saunders, The Times
“Nothing short of an asteroid impact would have made me put the book down”
—Irish Times
“Timely and humane.” —The Guardian: Literary Fiction of the Year 2015
"A quietly devastating examination of immigrant lives."
—The Observer: Best novels of 2015
“I defy anyone to read it and retain any simplistic opinions about “economic migration.”
— The Independent: Literary Fiction of the Year 2015
This intense and dramatically realistic novel, which was short listed for the 2015 Man Booker Prize, delves into the illegal immigrant situation in contemporary England. The story opens with Randeep marrying Narinder, an English citizen and deeply religious Sikh who has decided to postpone her own wedding and risk ruining her family's reputation not out of love but to provide Randeep with a legal means to move to England. Avtar, who is involved with Randeep's younger sister, travels to England on a student visa but is interested only in finding work and sending money back home. Tochi, an untouchable whose entire family was murdered, is also searching for work. A man of few words and fierce determination, he moves into the house where Randeep and Avtar are living with other illegal immigrants, as they take the lowest-level construction jobs and other menial tasks. After their house is raided, they are left to scavenge for work and shelter, lost in a strange land where they don't speak the language and have no understanding of the basic rules of society. VERDICT Proclaimed one of Granta's Best Young British Novelists in 2013, Sahota depicts the culture, language, and mentality of Britain's Indian immigrant community from deep within. A harrowing and moving drama of life on the edge. [See Prepub Alert, 9/28/15.]—James Coan, SUNY at Oneonta Lib.
The intertwined lives of four Indian immigrants in England reveal broad truths through heartbreaking details. It seems like a common enough premise at first: several young people from struggling families flee their native country to find a better life—or better work, at least. But as Sahota (Ours Are the Streets, 2011) demonstrates in his rough-around-the-edges second novel, every immigrant story is wholly individual, no matter how familiar it feels. Weaving back and forth through chronologies and perspectives, he traces the origin stories of Randeep, Avtar, and Tochi as they make their ways from India to Sheffield, an industrial city in the north of England, in the early 2000s. Lonely Randeep must support his "visa wife," a religious Sikh and fellow immigrant named Narinder, who sought the role out of a sense of service, leaving an arranged engagement, a violent brother, and a disappointed father behind. When Randeep's sense of obligation toward her turns to affection, Narinder folds further inward until she meets fiery Tochi, who belongs to the destitute Dalit ("untouchable") caste. He squats in the apartment below hers, and they gradually connect through their shared alienation from the parts they're supposed to be playing—but it's an impossible pairing, of course. Piety and fury don't get happy endings. Neither does delicate Avtar, who winds up working a series of filthy, treacherous jobs despite his student visa. England is rarely kind to this quartet, thwarting their efforts at betterment with police raids, poverty, and other trials. Sahota peppers these scenes with a riot of minor characters that can be overwhelming, but his observations of our broken social system are razor-sharp. When the place you've left is burning and the one you're in doesn't want you, how do you find your way home?