Kiran Desai's long-awaited third novel is an utter triumph . . . it's one of the strongest contenders on this year's Booker longlist . . . Sentence by sentence, The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny makes for blissful reading . . . Desai has managed some literary alchemy. On the surface, she has written a believable but still cute will-they-won't-they romance . . . but she also incorporates elements of magical realism . . . and through all that, Desai uses the struggle of her two writer protagonists to acknowledge, embrace and then undercut various tropes and cliches that Western readers have come to expect from her, and her compatriots -- Lucy Scholes * Daily Telegraph (5 stars) *
A sprawling epic love story that has consumed her life for two decades . . . far and away Desai's most ambitious novel . . . it spans continents and unearths decades of family history, exploring the effects of globalization, the legacy of colonialism and partition in India, and the slippery, transmutable nature of identity -- Alexandra Alter * New York Times *
The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny has the feel, and at nearly 700 pages, the size, of a multigenerational epic. For all the book's great scope, though, no detail is too granular to escape Desai's notice. Through the love story of its two main characters, Indians torn between America and home, the book explores and enacts the tension between two paths for Indian fiction, social realism and magical realism, and fuses them to original and enthralling effect -- Chris Power * Guardian *
A love story, surrealist mystery, study of identity and feat of metafiction . . . The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny? ?more than earns its buzz . . . It's a starburst of a novel, dazzling and unforgettable . . . At nearly 700 pages, it is a long book but one that allows for the kind of intense, sumptuous immersion that can feel for the reader like being under a spell . . . Desai's novel strives to capture nothing less than the fullness of human existence - its paradoxes, eccentricities and wonders - and at its most ambitious, the abyssal, often inexpressible devastation wrought by the loss of self . . . A love story spanning years of hurdles also demands an ending worthy of its journey. Desai delivers spectacularly -- Yagnishsing Dawoor * Observer *
A dazzling epic . . . this capacious story of love, work and family set between India and the US is both dizzyingly vast and insistently miniature . . . immensely entertaining -- Alex Clark * Guardian *
An epic romance . . . a consistently surprising saga jam-packed with incident . . . amongst it all, Desai finds time for nuanced send-ups of everything from the self-importance of a ritzy literary gala in New York to the machinations of the Indian marriage market, as well as poignant rumination on migrant experience -- Anthony Cummins * Sunday Times *
A transcendent triumph . . . not so much a novel as a marvel. [It is] among those most rarefied books: better company than real-life people -- Alexandra Jacobs * New York Times *
Desai's [novel] is so much more than a love story, exploring themes of race, class, American individualism, modern - day alienation, toxic entanglements and the fraught but fundamental need to forge connection. Steadily accruing emotional heft, it's entertaining, surprising, profound, and moving. Magnificent -- Stephanie Cross * Daily Mail *
This novel is grand in sweep yet satisfyingly intimate -- Malcolm Forbes * Economist *
It demands patient engagement and offers generous rewards in return . . . this oceanic novel . . . the tides of history run alongside the currents of chance and fate that shape the lives of Sonia and Sunny . . . The writing moves fluently between distinctive voices, fusing a minutely observed realism with swirling undercurrent of magical thinking . . . The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny overspills boundaries because it addresses an impossibly huge subject. L