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A fanged and toothed creature called hope
Mint Kolkata
|November 01, 2025
Megha Majumdar's second novel, set in a famine-stricken Kolkata of the near future, far surpasses her debut
In the novel, the family makes their way from Kolkata to Ann Arbor.
(istockphoto)
The critics got it wrong. Many of the world’s leading literary commentators hailed Megha Majumdar’s debut A Burning (2020) as a propulsive thriller, a “brief, brave novel”, as James Wood called it in The New Yorker.
While A Burning has memorable characters such as Jivan, a young Muslim woman living in modern-day India with big dreams, who is shattered by an evil system, it often falters in voice and pace, and did seem like it was written for a non-Indian readership. But it is in her new novel, A Guardian and a Thief, that Majumdar comes into her own. It truly deserves all the hosannas she received from critics for her first, as it upends easy notions of right and wrong. It is one of the finest novels of the year, because it does a complex thing and it does it well—it shows us how we are all guardians, and we are all thieves.
This story is from the November 01, 2025 edition of Mint Kolkata.
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