The Abiding Charm of Romesh Gunesekera

This Sri Lanka-born author’s work explores new and unexpected worlds

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This Sri Lanka-born author’s work explores new and unexpected worlds

Sri Lanka-born poet and fiction-writer Romesh Gunesekera, 65, began his writing journey in the 1990s. His early stories were published in Stand magazine, The London Magazine, Granta and his poems in the London Review of Books, Poetry Durham and other esteemed publications. Having moved from his birthplace in Colombo to the Philippines at age 12 and then at 17 to England, where he now lives, Gunesekera’s writing attempts to explore the immigrant experience, and trace the impact of the violence and political tensions that have ravaged the elysian beauty of his country of origin.

An award-winning author of several celebrated books, Gunesekera’s debut novel Reef (1994) was shortlisted for the 1994 Man Booker Prize as well as for the Guardian Fiction Prize. Pico Iyer described this novel in a review as "the best novel from the subcontinent since Rohinton Mistry's Such a Long Journey … Calmly, it gives us a new and unexpected world, and gradually it makes it feel like home." His third novel, Heaven’s Edge, a dystopian novel set in the near future, was published by Bloomsbury. His powerful short-story collection, Monkfish Moon (1992), which was hailed as a New York Times Notable Book in 1993, includes a number of tales that, while set in London, nevertheless feels the impact of the, then ongoing, civil war in Sri Lanka, reflecting the imagination of a writer who explores ‘home’ through the migrant frame of distance and memory. 

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