Book: Mother Mary Comes to Me
Author: Arundhati Roy
In her first memoir, Booker Prize-winning author Arundhati Roy turns from fiction to memory, tracing her turbulent, formative relationship with her mother, the formidable Mary Roy.

Synopsis
Growing up between Kerala and Tamil Nadu, Roy was raised in a household alive with eccentric relatives, fierce arguments and even fiercer love. Mary Roy, a visionary educator who founded a celebrated school in Kottayam and won a landmark legal battle securing inheritance rights for Christian women, was both trailblazer and tyrant — “my shelter and my storm”.
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What to expect
Expect storytelling that meanders beautifully, as if shared on a shaded veranda: vivid family portraits, sharp humour and flashes of rebellion.
Roy writes candidly about the emotional whiplash of her childhood, from moments of rejection alongside deep attachment to her eventual flight to Delhi at 18 to carve out her own identity.
This is not a sentimental tribute but an unflinching exploration of contradiction. Roy examines how conflict, chaos and complicated love shaped her into both activist and artist. The tone is intimate yet politically alert, blending personal confession with social commentary.
Part ode, part reckoning, this memoir is bold, witty and deeply human. It’s a reminder that mother-daughter relationships are rarely simple and often the crucible in which exceptional women are forged.






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