The book of'God of Small Things" is Arundhati Roy's novel about the Indian condition of Kerala.It focuses on a more distant family and specifically on intimate twins, Rahel and her sibling Estha.
The story shifts forward and backward in time, yet principally concentrates on a specific time in 1969 when Sophie Mol and her mom, Margaret Kochamma, come to visit.
Margaret had abandoned her then spouse, Chacko while he was in London to wed another man who as of late kicked the bucket.
The story to a great extent fixates on the twins and their responses to occasions, additionally incorporates other relatives, for example, Pappachi and Mammachi, the grandparents, their now grown-up kids, Ammu, mother of the twins, Baby Kachamma and Chacko.
The title alludes to the thought that things can change all of a sudden and significantly in life. The novel is additionally set against the foundation of Communism that was common in Kerala around then.
Close to the start of the story we discover that Sophie Mol has kicked the bucket and that "Things can change in a day, " and that "Anything can transpire".
The twins offer conversation starters that have no answers. For instance, after Ammu awakens from a fantasy Estha asks her, "In the event that you are glad in a fantasy does it number?" In this clever, grievous novel Roy gives us a photo of life that is genuine and in the meantime incredible.
While the novel is set in India, the God of little things exists all over the place and anyplace. It is the sort of story that stays in your brain and touches your heart until the end of time.