The Ministry of Utmost Happiness not for movie: Arundhati Roy

Author Arundhati Roy has said her second book The Ministry of Utmost Happiness is not a novel which is to be made into a movie.
Arundhati Roy
Arundhati Roy

Author Arundhati Roy has said her second book The Ministry of Utmost Happiness is not a novel which is to be made into a movie.

With The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, Roy has marked her return to the world of literary fiction this year, after a gap of two decades.

Roy, who received The Man Booker Prize in 1997 for her first book The God of Small Things, was speaking at the Penguin Fever organised by Penguin Random House India to mark 30 years of the publishing house, in the India Habitat Centre here on Thursday.

Roy spoke to a full house in conversation with Shohini Ghosh. She also took questions from audience members and read excerpts from the novel.

"It is not a novel that wants to be an essay, it is not a novel that wants to be a film. All it wants to be is a novel. I wanted to write something about the air we breathe and the air we breathe has caste, gender, Kashmir, love, animal and cities and everything. The book reflects so," the writer said.

"When I started writing God of Small Things, somewhere in my mind I had set up it as stubbornly visual. It is very visual but I don't think it will either make a great film," she said.

"A lot of Hollywood film-makers wanted to buy the rights of the book. My agents back there would say 'Look Arundhati, they are willing to give you anything you want, but I would say no'," she noted.

Arundhati Roy at Penguin Fever
Arundhati Roy at Penguin Fever
Sharmila Tagore, Dayanita Singh and Shobhaa De at day one of Penguin Fever
Sharmila Tagore, Dayanita Singh and Shobhaa De at day one of Penguin Fever

The Ministry of Utmost Happiness had failed to make the shortlist of six books for The Man Booker Prize (Fiction) 2017. 

Her novel was considered among the top competitors in the race and was earlier described as a "significant" work of fiction. Widely hailed by international critics, Roy's novel was thought to be a sure-name in the shortlist.

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