The Economist reads

Six novels about India, perhaps the world’s most interesting place

Works of fiction about a country whose global clout, already large, is growing

 After a sacred bath, Hindu pilgrims wash their clothes in the river Ganges, Varanasi, India.
Photograph: Magnum Photos

THERE IS A case to be made that, to a Westerner, India is the most interesting place on Earth. This writer had that thought decades ago on the banks of the Ganges river in Varanasi, a city that is holy to Hindus. The river is at once a goddess, a laundry and a thoroughfare. People defecate on its banks, and when human bodies are cremated there sometimes mourners cannot afford to buy enough wood to finish the job. So many seemingly incompatible realities fused together! For such reasons, India has long fascinated outsiders. Increasingly it commands attention for other reasons. In 2023 India surpassed China to become the world’s most populous country, with 1.4bn people. It is one of the world’s strongest big economies. In global affairs it is increasingly important. Most of the novels we recommend below predate India’s recent rise to geopolitical prominence and are not celebratory. They have much to say about India’s troubles: tension between the Hindu majority and the Muslim minority, poverty, caste divisions and bureaucracy. They will entrance readers and educate them about one of the world’s most important and interesting places.

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From the August 31st 2024 edition

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