All eyes are on the Booker Prize announcement on Monday, with Kiran Desai emerging as the frontrunner for her long-awaited novel The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny. Two decades in the making and nearly 700 pages long, the book marks a monumental return for the author who last won the Booker in 2006 for The Inheritance of Loss.
Desai’s latest work has been hailed by critics as a sweeping and intimate portrait of love and displacement. It follows two Indians living in the United States, navigating the loneliness of migration and the quiet fractures of belonging. The narrative moves across continents and time, blending humour, melancholy, and a deep awareness of the migrant condition qualities that have long defined Desai’s literary voice.
If The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny wins, Desai will enter a rarefied literary circle, becoming only the sixth writer ever to win the Booker twice. The distinction would place her alongside Margaret Atwood, Hilary Mantel, JM Coetzee, Peter Carey and JG Farrell, an achievement that underscores her enduring influence in contemporary fiction.
For readers and critics alike, the anticipation surrounding Desai’s return extends beyond the prize itself. As The Globe and Mail noted, her new novel is “an epic romance rooted in the global dislocation of modern lives,” a theme that resonates powerfully in today’s fractured world. Whether or not she takes home the Booker again, The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny has already reaffirmed Desai’s place among the most profound chroniclers of exile, identity, and emotional solitude.
With inputs from agencies


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