Description
China Room by Sunjeev Sahota is a dual-timeline literary novel that interweaves the lives of a young bride in 1929 Punjab and a young man in 1999 England, exploring themes of power, secrecy, and personal resilience. In Punjab, Mehar is married to three brothers in a single ceremony and confined, along with her co-wives, to the family’s “china room,” where she observes and deciphers the household’s hidden dynamics while navigating the oppressive control of her mother-in-law. As the Indian independence movement stirs in the background, Mehar must balance desire, curiosity, and survival in a fraught domestic environment.
Across the century, a young man from small-town England seeks to overcome a destructive addiction while staying at his ancestral home in Punjab, where the locked china room becomes both a literal and symbolic space of reckoning and transformation. Through richly drawn characters and intimate narrative, Sahota examines the constraints imposed by family, culture, and history, while celebrating the human capacity for endurance and self-discovery. China Room is a compelling exploration of identity, inheritance, and the enduring struggle for autonomy within restrictive systems.











