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Literary FictionHistorical Fiction

Rohinton Mistry

Canadian · b. 1952

4 books reviewed Avg rating 4.4 / 5Top rating 4.7 / 5

Giller Prize, Commonwealth Writers' Prize, Booker Prize shortlist (multiple)

Rohinton Mistry is an Indian-Canadian novelist whose A Fine Balance is a powerful and harrowing account of four lives colliding under the shadow of India's Emergency in the 1970s.

Rohinton Mistry is one of the great living novelists in the English language, though his output has been modest and his readership smaller than his stature deserves. A Fine Balance, published in 1995, is his masterwork: set in an unnamed Indian city during Indira Gandhi’s Emergency of the mid-1970s, it follows four characters — two tailors, a young woman, and her student lodger — whose lives intertwine under conditions of extraordinary brutality and political repression. The novel is long, demanding, and heartbreaking in ways that accumulate slowly and then strike hard.

Mistry writes with the moral seriousness and formal control of the nineteenth-century novelists he clearly admires — Dickens and Tolstoy come to mind — but his voice is entirely his own. The novel’s portrait of caste violence, forced sterilization, and bureaucratic cruelty is unflinching, and its emotional power comes precisely from how carefully Mistry has built his characters before allowing them to be destroyed or diminished. It is one of those books that changes what you think the novel is capable of.

A Fine Balance is not recommended for readers seeking comfort. Mistry makes no concessions to easy resolution, and the reading experience can be grinding. But readers willing to meet it on its own terms will find it one of the most important and moving novels written in the last fifty years.

4 Books Reviewed

A Fine Balance book cover

A Fine Balance

by Rohinton Mistry

4.7

Four characters — a widow, a student, and two tailors — are brought together in 1975 India during Indira Gandhi's Emergency, finding in each other a fragile refuge against catastrophe.

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Such a Long Journey book cover

Such a Long Journey

by Rohinton Mistry

4.4

Gustad Noble, a Parsi bank clerk in 1971 Bombay, is drawn into an ill-fated conspiracy involving an old friend, the Indo-Pakistani War, and a sum of money that will threaten everything he has built.

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Family Matters book cover

Family Matters

by Rohinton Mistry

4.3

Nariman Vakeel, an elderly Parsi professor with Parkinson's disease, is moved from his stepchildren's large apartment to his daughter's small one — a shift that tests every relationship in the family and exposes the accumulated debts and resentments of decades.

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Tales from Firozsha Baag book cover

Tales from Firozsha Baag

by Rohinton Mistry

4.2

Eleven interconnected stories set in Firozsha Baag, a Parsi apartment complex in Bombay — a community portrait that introduces many of the themes and the compassionate vision that would define Mistry's later novels.

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