Skip to content

Arundhati Roy Mother Mary Comes To Me

€14.99

New
Code 9781405978477
Add to Basket
Description

Binding: Paperback

Date Published: 11 Jun 2026

The incredible first memoir from the Booker-winning radical icon Arundhati Roy, author of The God of Small Things

THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER
SHORTLISTED FOR WATERSTONES BOOK OF THE YEAR 2025
SHORTLISTED FOR THE WOMENS PRIZE FOR NONFICTION 2026


'Heart-smashed' by the death of the mother she ran from at age eighteen and shaken by the intensity of her response, Arundhati Roy began this remarkable memoir - a soaring account, both intimate and inspiring, of how the author became the person and the writer she is: shaped by circumstance, but above all by her relationship to her extraordinary, singular mother, Mary, who she describes as 'my shelter and my storm'.

With the scale, sweep and depth of her novels, and the passion, political clarity and warmth of her essays, Mother Mary Comes to Me is an ode to freedom, a tribute to thorny love and savage grace - a memoir like no other.

'I loved Arundhati Roy's memoir; raw, tender, honest about the ferocity of mother-daughter relationships and the making of a writer' Nilanjana Roy, Financial Times (Books of the Year)

'Outstanding. Roy's life story is truly remarkable' Nicola Sturgeon, Observer (Books of the Year)

FOYLES BOOK OF THE YEAR 2025

AUDIBLE BOOK OF THE YEAR 2025
BLACKWELL'S NON-FICTION BOOK OF THE YEAR 2025
WINNER OF THE GOOGLE PLAY BEST OF 2025 AWARD
SHORTLISTED FOR THE BRITISH BOOK AWARDS BOOK OF THE YEAR 2026
SHORTLISTED FOR THE INDIE BOOK AWARDS 2026

About the Author

Arundhati Roy is the author of the novels The God of Small Things, which won the Booker Prize in 1997, and The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, which was longlisted for the Booker Prize in 2017. She is the author of various works of non-fiction including My Seditious Heart, Azadi and, most recently, The Architecture of Modern Empire.

Delivery Info

We provide FREE delivery in the Republic of Ireland when you spend €49 or more. 

FREE Click & Collect from The Ennis Bookshop. You will not be charged for this service.  We are happy to arrange Delivery outside Ireland. Please e-mail us at enquiries@ennisbookshop.ie for more information. 

Find out more about our Delivery & Collection services

Returns Policy

We want you to be completely satisfied with your order and we would hope to resolve any problems you may have. If you are unhappy with your purchase, we will exchange or refund the item or issue a credit note, providing the goods are not damaged and all packaging is still intact.

Terms and conditions apply.

Please view our full Returns Policy for further information.

Click to view complete product details

More Like This

Katriona O'Sullivan Poor

€15.95

Brave and absorbing . . . In this remarkable memoir, the Booker-winning novelist looks back on her bittersweet relationship with her mercurial mother . . . The world described in the first part of the book provides much of the material for The God of Small Things. But these pages aren't significant for giving us access to Roy's inspiration, or as a preamble to her life as a bestselling writer who would go on to become an oppositional political voice. Even if she were none of these things or had never written her novel, they would be utterly absorbing. They have a wonderful, self-assured self-sufficiency * Guardian *
Beautifully written . . . It is a total pleasure to spend time with Arundhati Roy's mind and memory in this funny, wise, candid and perceptive memoir * Independent, 'Book of the Month' (5 stars) *
The book has the lyricism of Gabriel Garcia Marquez, the political sweep of Barbara Kingsolver, and the antic family humour of David Sedaris * Financial Times *
Truthful, moving, absorbing . . . [Roy] achieves the one thing that any writer's memoir ought to do: trace the formation of their voice . . . The best piece of non-fiction she has ever written * Telegraph *
Unusually, my book of the year is not a novel - it is Arundhati Roy's outstanding memoir Mother Mary Comes to Me. Roy's life story is truly remarkable. Her account of it - rooted in her troubled relationship with her mother - affords a real appreciation of the person she became. She shows there is no fixed boundary between fiction and nonfiction in the hands of a skilled writer. Roy rails against injustice and stands up for the values intrinsic to her worldview -- Nicola Sturgeon * Observer, 'The best books of 2025' *
Remarkable, fascinating . . . [Mother Mary Comes to Me] shows us, with a gentle and hard-won wisdom, that we do not forget our mothers, or our motherlands, even when we are miles, continents or worlds away from them. We carry them with us wherever we go -- Elif Shafak * Observer *
Arundhati Roy writes in characteristically dazzling prose . . . This memoir teems with irreverent humour and acerbic, often brilliant insights * Irish Independent *
Sharp, irreverent, wickedly funny . . . unsettling, bruising, often brutal, yet ultimately life-affirming * BBC News *
Arundhati Roy, India's finest writer by far, revealed much, with characteristic candour and wit, in her long-awaited memoir Mother Mary Comes to Me * The Spectator, 'Book of the Year' *
Feels like the best kind of fiction * The Economist *

Close

POP-IN HTML goes here

Close

Your Basket

Your basket is currently empty