Book review: The Year of the Runaways by Sunjeev Sahota


Book review: The Year of the Runaways by Sunjeev Sahota




One of our lovely and dearly missed former staff members, Hollie Wilkinson, blogs from her home in Shangahai, China.
The Year of the Runways by Sunjeev Sahota is one of those books that will keep you up reading late into the night, a book that has the rare quality, that after finishing you want to pick it back up and start all over again. 
The novel is divided into the four seasons, beginning in the cold English winter in Sheffield. Here we are introduced to the characters this story is centered on: three Indian men, Tochi, Randeep and Avtar and an Indian-British woman, Narindar. The first part of the book switches between the stories of the four characters in Sheffield and chapters of what their lives were like before their arrival in England.
Sahota leads the reader through delicately crafted and vivid chapters contrasting the  backdrops of India and England. The first story is about Tochi, an 'untouchable' who goes from servant to rickshaw driver in a time of political unrest in India. At the end of winter we learn more about the other characters, Avtar and Randeep, and their relationship with each other. Avtar has good intentions but he, like the others, has his own set of complications; family debts and undying love for an ex-neighbour. Randeep is a middle class Indian, with a problematic family situation and a shameful university experience, he’s considered the lucky one –with  a visa wife living across town who he barely knows. Then there is Narindar, a British born Sikh, torn between her family’s honour and her own moral struggles.
As the story moves forward the characters relationships and lives become increasingly strained. The desperation of the three men seeps through the page as they discover what lengths they will go to to make money and to survive. The stories of Tochi, Avtar and Randeep are eloquently written, slowly revealing why each man leaves behind their family in India. But unlike other books set around Indian immigration, this story also looks at the guilt Indians raised in England feel towards their fellow countrymen, seen through the eyes of Narindar.

It is through these effortlessly told stories that Sahota composes a deeply rich novel, that days after finishing I found myself still picking it up and flicking through the pages.