No Other World: A Novel
By (Author) Rahul Mehta
HarperCollins Publishers Inc
HarperPerennial
3rd March 2018
United States
General
Fiction
Family saga / generational saga fiction
FIC
Paperback
320
Width 134mm, Height 203mm
270g
From the author of the prize-winning collection Quarantine, an insightful, compelling debut novel set in rural America and India in the 1980s and 90s, part coming-of-age story about a gay Indian American boy, part family saga about an immigrant familys struggles to find a sense of belonging, identity, and hope.
In a rural community in Western New York, twelve-year-old Kiran Shah, the American-born son of Indian immigrants, longingly observes his prototypically American neighbors, the Bells. He attends school with Kelly Bell, but hes powerfully drawnin a way he does not yet understandto her charismatic father, Chris.
Kirans yearnings echo his parents bewilderment as they try to adjust to a new world. His father, Nishit Shah, a successful doctor, is haunted by thoughts of the brother he left behind. His mother, Shanti, struggles to accept a life with a man she did not chooseher marriage to Nishit was arrangedand her growing attachment to an American man. Kiran is close to his older sister, Preetiuntil an unexpected threat and an unfathomable betrayal drive a wedge between them that will reverberate through their lives.
As he leaves childhood behind, Kiran finds himself perpetually on the outsideas an Indian American torn between two cultures and as a gay man in a homophobic society. In the wake of an emotional breakdown, he travels to India, where he forms an intense bond with a teenage hijra, a member of Indias ancient transgender community. With her help, Kiran begins to pull together the pieces of his broken past.
Sweeping and emotionally complex, No Other World is a haunting meditation on love, belonging, and forgiveness that explores the line between our responsibilities to our families and to ourselves, the difficult choices we make, and the painful cost of claiming our true selves.
Like Tom Perrotta, Mehta digs into suburban angst and household secrets with insight and humor. A family saga for the 21st century, No Other World journeys into daunting horizons to discover the familiar. Shelf Awareness No Other Worldis deeply satisfying, a novel so moving that I worried about its main characters for weeks after I finished reading it. Rahul Mehta is a writer with astonishing emotional subtlety and generosity; I loved this beautiful book. Lauren Groff, author of Fates and Furies What a compelling, magical, big-hearted, lyrical book. Rahul Mehta is an expansive and mesmerizing talenthe sees things generously, from all angles, and makes the reader care, and feel, deeply. George Saunders, author of Tenth of December No Other Worldis a tough and touching master class on being. Kirans life is a remarkable catalogue of the many brands of love, some painful, some nourishing, all of them necessary. Brian Leung, author of Take Me Home No Other World is a profound and engrossing family saga about the immigrant experience. Mehta is a confident, empathic storyteller, his rendering of brutal scenes of pain, lust and love on two continents is fearless but forgiving, and this is just his dbut novel. I impatiently await his next. Bharati Mukherjee, author of Jasmine Mehta uses vivid, memorable imagery to present likable, complex charactersand shimmering descriptions of emotionally resonant moments. Booklist (starred review) The power of No Other World is how inextricably bound to this world Mehtas characters are, and yet how untethered and restless they inevitably feelI want to catch all of Mehtas precious metaphors and store them in my palms Mehtas artfulness is the deep empathy with which we nevertheless regard his characters, forced to live in small worlds theyre not fit for, worlds that cannot contain their complexities. Lambda Book Report
Rahul Mehta's debut short story collection, Quarantine, won a Lambda Literary Award and the Asian American Literary Award for Fiction. His stories and essays have appeared in the Kenyon Review, the Sun, New Stories from the South, the New York Times Magazine, the International Herald Tribune, Marie Claire India, and elsewhere. An Out magazine "Out 100" honoree, Mehta lives in Philadelphia with his partner and their dog and teaches creative writing at the University of the Arts.