Author:Sunjeev Sahota
In 1929 young bride Mehar struggles with her family’s expectations whilst seventy years later her great-grandson discovers what her story can teach him about his own path.
'A gorgeous, gripping read' Kamila Shamsie
'A multi-generational masterpiece' Daily Mail
Mehar, a young bride in rural Punjab, is trying to discover the identity of her new husband. It is 1929, and she and her sisters-in-law - married to three brothers in a single ceremony - spend their days hard at work on the family farm, sequestered from contact with the men. When Mehar develops a theory as to which of them is hers, a passion is ignited that will put more than one life at risk.
Spiralling around Mehar's story is that of a young man who in 1999 flees from England to the deserted sun-scorched farm. Can a summer spent learning of love and of his family's past give him the strength for the journey home?
Readers love China Room
***** 'I didn't want it to end'
***** 'What. A. Book.'
***** 'Beautifully crafted...a story as old as time'
***** 'A novel of thwarted loves'
Shortlisted for the 2022 Rathbones Folio Prize
Longlisted for the 2021 Booker Prize
'Amazing storytelling...gripping and very moving' BBC Radio 4, Open Book
'I'm blown away by it' Tessa Hadley
'Moving...fresh and nourishing' The Times
Sunjeev Sahota's writing is the stuff of miracles. Emotional and heartrending, China Room juggles questions of love, debt, and what it means to build a home alongside the history that carries us. China Room is a propulsive dream, intricately wrought, and Sahota is a maestro.
—— Bryan Washington, author of LOT and MEMORIALChina Room is a rare novel that makes you pause in its beauty.
—— Francesca Carington , Sunday Telegraph, *Novel of the Week*Sahota is a truly original novelist, his prose sparingly precise in its beauty, steeped in kindness and deep humanity.
—— Ruth Scurr , TLSWith poise, restraint and deep intelligence, Sahota feeds us big, difficult themes - segregation and freedom, revolution and empire - in a form that is unsweetened, fresh and nourishing. Surely this, his third novel, will propel him up the shortlists to the prizewinning status he deserves.
—— Melissa Katsoulis , The Times, 'This Book Will Win Prizes'An extraordinarily gifted writer... Sahota's ability to shine a phrase is not bought for the usual steep formalist price, at the expense of simplicity, intimate feeling, and solid representation. He's both camera and painter, in a literary world that often separates those novelistic tasks.
—— James Wood , New YorkerSahota combines great writing with amazing storytelling... his books are intelligent and beautifully written and very poised but also incredibly immersive, gripping and very moving. An epic in miniature, China Room is the kind of novel that reminds you why you fell in love with reading in the first place.
—— Open Book , BBC Radio 4Novels this good are rare.
—— Anthony Cummins , Daily Mail, *Summer Reads of 2021*Sahota's prose is a finely modulated instrument that moves from subtle minutiae to cosmic magnitude... Exhibiting the narrative control and psychological acuity of Rohinton Mistry and Jhumpa Lahiri, Sahota's tale of trans-generational trauma is quietly devastating.
—— Madeleine Feeny , SpectatorSahota's beautifully crafted novel dovetails two stories from different eras... Both characters are prisoners of circumstances but, in their hunger for redemption, become emblematic of the human condition.
—— Max Davidson , Mail on SundaySuch a thrilling combination of beauty and heartbreak. It's breathtaking.
Sahota gives his period narrative the same effortless immediacy as his present-day one, yet his novel works by stealth, quietly beguiling the reader into an almost painful intimacy... I loved it.
—— Claire Allfree , Daily MailThere is a scrupulous subtlety about that way that Sahota refuses to let his historical characters act as though they are in a historical novel.
—— Alex Clark , Guardian, Book of the DayAn intense drama of classic themes - love, family, survival, and betrayal - told with passion and precision in Sahota's economical, lyrical prose.
—— Adam Foulds, author of THE QUICKENING MAZEA gripping read... a memorable and poignant depiction of how family histories can echo through the generations.
—— Huston Gilmore , Daily MirrorOutstanding... dense with intricate layers. As author, Sahota brilliantly plays with access to knowledge, to history. China Room promises to haunt and to illuminate.
—— Shelf AwarenessChina Room is very good at examining the trauma held in one family, whether it be personal or housed in a home, village, or country. Sahota seems to acknowledge that although we are not doomed to repeat the past, each subsequent generation feels a measure of the hardship that the last generation faced... a well-developed story of two lives that touch one another in ways that that can never be clearly seen.
—— India Lewis , Arts DeskEngrossing, intricate, excellent.
—— Literary ReviewSunjeev Sahota's The Year of the Runaways propelled him on to the 2015 Booker shortlist. His latest, China Room, a multi-generational masterpiece ... could well see him nominated again.
—— Stephanie Cross , Daily MailPolitical currents seep subtly in and the cumulative effect is potent
—— Max Liu , iExquisitely written
—— Sameer Rahim , Daily Telegraph, *Books of the Year*Sunjeev Sahota balances weighty ideas about cultural prisons and self-determination with hushed, featherweight prose
—— Claire Allfree , The Times, *Books of the Year*[A] hauntingly beautiful novel
—— Jane Shilling , Daily MailSahota's third novel has prose so beautiful it stops you dead
—— Daily TelegraphTackling many relevant issues, it's a heart-warming read
—— HeatPoignant, totally joyful, this is a great read
—— FabulousA feel-good read, with great characters to care about, it takes current issues seriously but adds plenty of humour
—— Choice[It leaves] the reader with that fuzzy feeling you want from a feel-good book. Fans of her previous hit, The Authenticity Project, will not be disappointed
—— Woman's WeeklyA feel-good tale about the power of real-life connections
—— SunYou can always rely on Pooley to deliver not just wonderful, lively characters but a story that leaves you feeling uplifted and hopeful
—— CultureFlyBatuman has taken what made The Idiot so brilliant, distilled it, and created an equally brilliant new work. Either/Or is unbridled joy.
—— Big IssueFunny... Unforgettable... Batuman is particularly good on sex and sexual politics... The star feature is the narration... garrulous, rambunctious... full of baroque riffs and digressions.
—— Claire Lowdown , SpectatorA fresh voice is a rare thing, and Elif Batuman is one such.
—— Times Literary Supplement, *Books of the Year*Either/Or is extremely funny and delightfully ludic, as it probes the very act of reading from the point of view of confused university student Selin.
—— Anakana Schofield, Irish Times, Books of the Year 2022I was desperately looking forward to Elif Batuman's Either/Or, and it more than lived up to it.
—— Samir Chadha , White Review, *Books of the Year*Re-encountering Selin...felt like being reunited with an old friend.
—— Helen Charman , White Review, *Books of the Year*Hilarious.
—— Alice Hattrick , White Review, *Books of the Year*I greatly enjoyed the comic zing of Elif Batuman's delightful Either/Or
—— Megan Hunter , White Review, *Books of the Year*Witty, intelligent and funny... [Selin's] inner monologue is addictive enough to read a thousand more pages of, and I can only cross my fingers that this isn't the last instalment of the series.
—— CrackJust as funny and self-aware and clever as The Idiot.
—— Jessica Zhan Mei Yu , White Review, *Books of the Year*Funny, wry and insightful
—— The Times, *Summer Reads of 2023*Laugh out loud…hilarious and thoughtful
—— Times Literary Supplement, *Books of the Year*