Booker winner Kiran Desai’s new novel delves into the many shades of loneliness
The Oxford English Dictionary defines loneliness as a feeling of unhappiness caused by having no friends or people to talk to.

But loneliness can also exist across spaces — those large or small interstices between and among humans that define relationships. An ordinary person might call these spaces rifts, but Booker Prize-winning author Kiran Desai interprets them as loneliness itself. Her latest offering, The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny, examines these connections as much as it explores the distances that separate people.
The novel portrays loneliness in many forms. For instance, Sunny meets a woman who grew up under an authoritarian regime and tells him he knows nothing about loneliness — because she has lived the loneliness of constant surveillance, of being denied private thoughts. Sonia’s mother tells her there are worse things than loneliness — a harsh truth, but one learned from experience.
Booker Prize-winning author Kiran Desai. Photo: Kiran Desai FB
In an interview with a national daily, Desai said, “I wanted to write about how modernity affects spiritual beings in matters of loneliness and love. The initial idea was to discuss all the lonelinesses between us — not just romantic ones, but also the great divides between nations, races, and classes. I chose to see those rifts as a kind of loneliness.”
Coming twenty years after The Inheritance of Loss, the novel revisits themes of globalization, family tradition, and immigrant experience.
According to Penguin Random House India, The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny has been shortlisted for the 2025 Booker Prize for Fiction. The winner will be announced at a ceremony in London on November 10, 2025.
Published in India under Penguin’s Hamish Hamilton imprint in September 2025, the book marks Desai’s first novel since The Inheritance of Loss, which won her both the Booker Prize (2006) and the National Book Critics Circle Award.
The story follows Sonia and Sunny, two young Indians navigating life between the United States and India, as they face personal, generational, and societal pressures. Through their intertwined journeys, Desai explores themes of love, family, identity, displacement, class, and the invisible bonds that connect one generation to another. It is a sweeping, deeply emotional novel that reaffirms Desai’s mastery of storytelling and her profound insight into human experience.
Manasi Subramaniam, Editor-in-Chief and Vice President of Hamish Hamilton, Allen Lane, Viking, Penguin, and Penguin Classics at PRH India, said in an email: “On the day of its publication, The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny strides into the world and onto the 2025 Booker shortlist. Kiran Desai returns after nearly twenty years with a novel as large as the world, as intimate as a heartbeat — a long story, a love story, a book gestated over nineteen years, written and rewritten, bursting with characters who refuse to remain secondary.”
IBNS
Senior Staff Reporter at Northeast Herald, covering news from Tripura and Northeast India.
Related Articles

Centre approves setting up of 'NaMo semiconductor Laboratory' at IIT Bhubaneswar, check all details
Union Minister of Electronics and Information Technology, Ashwini Vaishnaw, has recently approved the setting up of the ‘NaMo Semiconductor Laboratory’ at IIT Bhubaneswar.

Dhak, Dhunuchi, and Defence Bonds: Durga Puja in Mhow
From Kolkata’s grand pandals to a small cantonment town in Madhya Pradesh, Durga Puja remains a living tradition. Jayalakshmi Sengupta reports how in Mhow, retired and serving soldiers and their families recreate this spirit — through art, adda, food, theatre, and dance.

German envoy warns Indian students against overreliance on agents amid rise in visa rejections
New Delhi: Germany has become a leading destination for Indian students, with enrolments crossing 60,000, but the country’s envoy in New Delhi has cautioned against overreliance on private education consultants.

Classical singer and Padma Vibhushan awardee Chhannulal Mishra dies at 89
Varanasi/IBNS: Legendary Indian classical singer Chhannulal Mishra died of age-related ailments at the age of 89 on Thursday.
Latest News

Drugs valued at Rs 70 crore seized in Tripura; four held

Israel, Hamas hold indirect talks in Egypt to end Gaza war

US: Texas man arrested for killing Indian student Chandrashekar Pole at Fort Worth gas station

Taliban rejects Trump’s demand to retake Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan
