Diksha Basu
Poets & Writers Magazine|July - August 2017

whose debut novel, The Windfall, was published in June by Crown.

Gary Shteyngart
Diksha Basu

DIKSHA Basu’s The Windfall is one of the funniest novels I’ve read in recent times—and I read a lotta funny. But the humor doesn’t detract from some of the serious issues Basu touches on in her quest to capture the world of new money in New Delhi. The Windfall is about long-entrenched conservatism struggling against new social mores, and while the book is based in New Delhi, the themes are universal and very 2017. With a deceptively light touch and great warmth and affection, Basu has written an intelligent and incisive story about universal anxieties that plague us all. Especially me.

You started working on this in one of my classes at Columbia, if I remember correctly. But they were short stories, weren’t they? How did it end up becoming a novel?

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