Though somewhat languid in pace, the novel wins over the reader with its sincerity.
Yet she is haunted by its emptiness. Behind the slick surface, everything is a mess, she discovers. Her friends are as confused as she is. Though her Bengali family never truly set root in Shillong, Sophie yearns to return there—and to belong—as the meaninglessness of her life in Bangalore disenchants her.
But Shillong, too, proves chimerical, and Sophie’s attempt to forge a permanent link to it—by way of an enigmatic love interest, Ribor—is fraught with its own complications.
Ultimately centering on Sophie’s struggle to find home, Neti, Neti paints an empathetic portrait of the unusually liberated—and unexpectedly lost—middle-class youth of the brave new India.
Though somewhat languid in pace, the novel wins over the reader with its sincerity. Hasan is a sympathetic writer who allows even her harshest critic to nestle gently in her prose. The novel’s strongest passages come in Sophie’s fleeting insights, such as the realisation that her story cannot end. It can just go on and on.