The City of Devi, Manil Suri
The City of Devi, Manil Suri
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The City of Devi

Author: Manil Suri

Narrator: Vikas Adam and Priya Ayyar

Unabridged: 28 hr 34 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 02/04/2013


Synopsis

A dazzling, multilayered novel that not only encompasses a searing love story but, with its epic reach from quarks to mythology to geopolitics, also encapsulates the fate of the entire world.As Mumbai empties under the threat of imminent nuclear annihilation, Sarita, a thirty-three-year-old statistician, can only think of one thing: being reunited with Karun, her physicist husband. Why has he vanished? Who is he running from? How will they form the family of three hes always wanted? To find him, Sarita must journey across the surreal landscape of a near-abandoned city, braving gangs of competing Hindu and Muslim hoodlums. Joining her is Jaznominally a Muslim but whose true religion has always been sex with other men. Danger lurks around every corner, but so does the incongruous and the absurd: the patron goddess Devi Ma has even materialized on a beach to save her city from harm. Saritas search leads her to this beach, thrusting her into a trinity so mercurial, so consuming, that it will alter her life more fundamentally than any apocalypse to come. Fearlessly provocative, wickedly comedic, and propelled with rocket-fuel energy,The City of Devi exuberantly upends assumptions of politics, religion, sex, and Indias global emergence.

About Manil Suri

Manil Suri is a distinguished mathematics professor at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. Author of three acclaimed novels, including The Death of Vishnu, he is a former contributing opinion writer at the New York Times, for which he has written several widely read pieces on mathematics. He lives in Silver Spring, Maryland.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Jim

There’s a lot going on in this novel set in India. We’re in a post-apocalypse time in the near future. India and Pakistan have nuked each other and even though, as the author tells us, “Nuclear bombs are like potato chips, nobody can stop at just one,” it may be that they did just that: possibly onl......more

Goodreads review by Sneha

Sarita-Karun-Jaz. The triumvirate around whom the book revolves. I've never been a huge fan of the love-triangle plot. I often find them highly contrived, far too predictable and lacking novelty. Having grown up in Bombay on a typical diet of Bollywood romcoms, I think can be blamed for my prejudice.......more

Goodreads review by Aqiil

It is a beautiful book. The main protagonists - Jaz and Sarita - weave love-laced, honest accounts of their memories of Karun, the same man they both love, as they trudge through the desolate landscapes of a war-ridden India in his search. At first disjointed, their stories inevitably collide and th......more