Arundhati Roy biography
Date of birth : 1959-11-24
Date of death : -
Birthplace : Shillong, Meghalaya, India
Nationality : Indian
Category : Arts and Entertainment
Last modified : 2011-06-22
Credited as : Author and novelist, Booker Prize, The God of Small Things
3 votes so far
Arundhati Roy is the Indian social activist and author whose novel The God of Small Things won the prestigious Booker Prize for literature in 1997. Roy is a unusual blend of artist and activist; she has yet to publish a second novel. She left home at 16 and attended the Delhi School of Architecture. In 1984 she met her future husband, film director Pradip Krishen. She went on to write the TV movie In Which Annie Gives it Those Ones (1989, in which she also starred), and Electric Moon (1992). After souring on the film industry she turned to writing fiction; her first effort was the remarkable The God of Small Things, a tragic story of Indian twins Estha and Rahel and a family entangled in the rigid Indian caste system. It sold six million copies and made her famous. She spent the next decade writing and speaking on political topics like India's nuclear weapons programs, the Narmada Dam, and the war in Iraq. Her non-fiction books include The Cost of Living (1999), Power Politics (2002), and War Talk (2003). She announced in 2007 that she was beginning work on a second novel.
Some sources say Roy was born in 1961; we take the word of the U.S. Library of Congress, The Lannan Foundation and and other sources who say 1959... Roy was the first Indian woman to win the Booker Prize... She was awarded the Sydney Peace Prize in 2004 for her non-violent devotion to social causes... The title The God of Small Things refers to the character Velutha, a family handyman.