
The Parted Earth
“Both about firsthand trauma and inherited trauma…galvanized by the modern belief that recovery and remembrance can help restore what history has broken.”
Wall Street Journal
Winner of the Audie Award for Best Female Narrator
A Ms. Magazine Pick of the Month
A Chicago Review of Books Pick of the Month's Must-Reads
Spanning more than half a century and cities from New Delhi to Atlanta, this is a heartfelt and human portrait of the long shadow of the partition of India on the lives of three generations of women.
August 1947. Unrest plagues the streets of New Delhi leading up to the birth of the Muslim majority nation of Pakistan and the Hindu majority nation of India. Sixteen-year-old Deepa navigates the changing politics of her home, finding solace in messages of intricate origami from her secret boyfriend Amir. Soon Amir flees with his family to Pakistan and a tragedy forces Deepa to leave the subcontinent forever.
Sixty years later and half a world away in Atlanta: While grieving both a pregnancy loss and the implosion of her marriage, Deepa’s granddaughter Shan begins the search for her estranged grandmother, a prickly woman who had little interest in knowing her. As she pieces together her family history shattered by the partition, Shan discovers how little she actually knows about the women in her family and what they endured.
For readers of Jess Walter’s Beautiful Ruins, The Parted Earth follows Shan on her search for identity after loss uproots her life. Above all, it is a novel about families weathering the lasting violence of separation and how it can often takes a lifetime to find unity and peace.
Praise
