
The Shakespeare and Company Interview Shelter and Storm: Arundhati Roy on Writing Her Mother
Apr 29, 2026
Arundhati Roy, acclaimed novelist and activist, reads from and reflects on Mother Mary Comes to Me. She talks about writing a novelist’s memoir where memory and imagination blur. She explores her complex relationship with her mother, Kerala’s social context, architectural escape, chosen family, and the shift from literary fame to political responsibility.
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Memoir As Novelist's Labyrinth
- Arundhati Roy treats memoir as a novelist's craft where memory and imagination blur into fiction-like truth.
- She intentionally resists therapy-style explanations, aiming to present her mother as an unpackaged, contradictory public figure.
Resist Therapy Language When Narrating Family
- Avoid reductive therapy narratives when writing about complex relationships; preserve mystery instead of forcing psychological closure.
- Roy chose not to pin down her mother's motives, valuing adult understanding over victimhood rhetoric.
Outsider Childhood In Kerala
- Roy describes growing up in a small Syrian Christian Kerala community where her mother returned after leaving an alcoholic husband.
- The family were educated but poor outsiders in a conservative village, shaping Roy's early sense of otherness.







