Sujit Saraf is a novelist and playwright who lives in San Jose, California. Some of his previous novels are The Peacock Throne, nominated for the Encore Award in London, The Confession of Sultana Daku, and Harilal & Sons, which was nominated for the DSC prize in London and won the Crossword Book Award in India in 2017. He holds a PhD in engineering from the University of California, Berkeley, and has worked as a space scientist, a professor, an engineer, and an entrepreneur in Silicon Valley. In his day job, he runs a software company in California.
<p>Nirmal Chandra Mattoo has lived in Port Blair, in the Andamans, for thirty years. An acknowledged expert on the tribes of the islands, particularly the Jarawas and the Sentinelese, he now runs a souvenir shop selling fake tribal artifacts to unsuspecting tourists. In the shop, he hides dark secrets and a long history with the people of the islands. </p><p>One day, an American missionary appears in Mattoo’s shop and seeks his help to visit North Sentinel Island, where he hopes to bring the Sentinelese tribals to Jesus. Mattoo agrees, but also has deep misgivings, because the Sentinelese are among the last uncontacted people on earth; their stone-age civilization has survived in complete isolation for thousands of years, and their hostility has made their island a zone forbidden to outsiders.</p><p>Undeterred, the missionary sets off on his mission, and Mattoo, as his guide, finds himself embroiled in a situation from which there can be no escape, as the fate of the Sentinelese, his own fate, and that of the Indian State all come together in a catastrophic denouement.</p><p>Island is a searing examination of nationhood, citizenship, the lot of those who live on the margins, and what it means to be Indian today.</p>