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Shantaram

Goodreads: 4.27/5
Published 2003
Pages 944
Language English
Goodreads 4.27/5

Should You Read It?

Maybe

A 900-page epic that demands commitment. If the first hundred pages grab you, the rest will too.

Best For Readers who love long, immersive novels and books about Bombay.
Skip If You are short on time or distrust very long first-person narratives.
Tone Sprawling, romantic, philosophical
Pace Slow
Commitment Very long (944 pages)

Shantaram is the sprawling, semi-autobiographical novel of an escaped Australian convict who arrives in 1980s Bombay, learns Hindi and Marathi, lives in a slum, opens a free health clinic, falls in love, joins the Bombay underworld, and eventually fights with the mujahideen in Afghanistan. Gregory David Roberts wrote much of it in prison after his recapture. The book is divisive: a cult favorite for many travelers and an overwritten epic for many critics.

What Works

The sense of place is extraordinary. Bombay in the 1980s feels alive on the page in a way few novels achieve.

What May Not Work

The narrator is heroic in ways that strain credibility, and the philosophical asides slow the book repeatedly.

Key Themes

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Frequently Asked Questions

Should I read Shantaram?
A 900-page epic that demands commitment. If the first hundred pages grab you, the rest will too.
How many pages is Shantaram?
Shantaram is 944 pages long.
What genre is Shantaram?
Shantaram falls under Contemporary, Literary Fiction.
Who should read Shantaram?
Readers who love long, immersive novels and books about Bombay.