I’m thrilled to recommend this moving debut to the BOTM community, and I cannot wait to see what Madhuri Vijay writes next. The novel is both richly drawn and easily digestible (think Min Jin Lee’s Pachinko), and it gave me book hangover for days. I was transported by Shalini’s story-her heartbreaking relationship with her mother, her search for a life of meaning, the often infuriating choices she makes-and by the stories of the Kashmiri people living under constant scrutiny by police. You know that feeling when a book is so good you forget you have a body that needs to eat, sleep, and move around? Yeah, that’s what The Far Field did for me. But the closer Shalini becomes to the villagers she meets, the more her presence threatens their safety. Instead, she finds herself swept into the lives of a family of generous people who offer her shelter and support, even as violence upends their lives. The Far Field follows Shalini, a young, fairly well-off Indian woman, who travels to the politically fraught region of Kashmir in a bid for closure after the death of her mother-a fearless, hot-tempered woman to whom Shalini was loyal. So when I grabbed The Far Field as an in-case-I-run-out-of-things-to-read-this-weekend, it was a rare moment of serendipity I had no idea I was packing a book so wonderful that it would become my favorite read of 2018. So many that at times I’m not even sure which ones I’ve got in my bag.
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