The Spoiled Heart

by Sunjeev Sahota

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"Nayan Olak keeps seeing Helen Fletcher around town. She's returned with her teenage son to live in the run-down house at the end of the lane, and--though she's strangely guarded--Nayan can't help but be drawn to her. He hasn't risked love since losing his young family in a terrible accident twenty years earlier. In the wake of the tragedy, Nayan's labor union, long a cornerstone of his community, became the center of his life: a way for him to channel his energies into making the world a show more better--fairer, as he sees it--place. Now, he's decided to mount a run for the leadership. But his campaign pits him against a newcomer, Megha, who quickly proves to be a more formidable challenger than he anticipated. As Nayan's differences with Megha spin out of control, complicating the ideals he's always held dear, he grows closer to Helen--and unknowingly barrels toward long-held secrets about how their pasts might be connected. Suddenly, much more is threatened than his chances of winning. In one sense a tragedy in the classic mold, tracing one man's seemingly inexorable fall, The Spoiled Heart is also an explosively contemporary story of how a few words or a single action--to one person careless, to another, charged--can trigger a cascade of unimaginable consequences. A vivid and multi-layered exploration of the mysteries of the heart, how community is forged and broken, and the shattering impact of secrets and assumptions alike, it is a blazing achievement from one of Britain's foremost living writers"-- show less

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5 reviews
Nayan Olak is running for election for the position of general secretary of the largest labour union in central England. Forty-two years of age, he began as a factory worker but has been involved in union advocacy for decades. For Nayan, the union has become the centre of his life after a tragedy two decades earlier. Now divorced and caring for his aging father who is suffering with dementia, he starts a relationship with Helen Fletcher who has returned to the neigbourhood with her son. Nayan’s opponent is Megha Sharma, younger and better educated but with less experience, though she is serving as the first head of diversity, equality and inclusion. She shares Nayan’s Indian ethnicity but comes from a wealthier class.

Clashing show more visions of the union’s future lead to a vicious and destructive campaign. Nayan believes in broad economic reforms to benefit working people while Megha focuses on specific initiatives to address injustices against oppressed groups. The campaign becomes a series of ad hominem attacks where Nayan is labelled a racist and misogynist and Megha, an out-of-touch and divisive elite.

The narrator is Sajjan, a former neighbour of Nayan. A novelist, he is fascinated with Nayan’s story and meets with him years after the events to get his version of what happened during the election and his relationship with Helen. He thinks that he may be able to retell Nayan’s story in a novel. Sajjan is not just a narrator; he acts as a detective gradually unravelling the truth of what happened to Nayan and others involved in his life.

This narrative choice means that the information Sajjan provides is second-hand and there are suggestions that Nayan’s version of events may not always be reliable. Sajjan suspects that Nayan is not always totally honest; at one point he refers to Nayan’s “doctored version.” The truthfulness of the story Sajjan tells is also compromised when it seems that his parents were involved in Nayan’s past.

There is considerable suspense. There’s the outcome of the election of course. But then there are suggestions that Helen may have played a greater role in Nayan’s past than he suspects. Though Helen is a home health care aide, why does she refuse to accept Nayan’s father as a client and avoid any contact with him? Though Nayan and Sajjan meet “several years” after the election year, at first Sajjan is given only “glimpses of a truth [Nayan] couldn’t yet bear to voice”; only at the end are dark secrets revealed.

The novel is like a tragedy telling the story of a man’s ruin, both personal and professional, and explores whether the downfall is self-inflicted or caused by societal issues. Nayan’s character is well-developed. He’s a good man who has suffered, but he is flawed and there is certainly a degree of hubris that contributes to his heart being spoiled.

The book also examines how a few words or a single careless action can have unintended and unimaginable consequences. The toxic effects of social media are also detailed.

Though the discussion of election issues is sometimes heavy-handed, I enjoyed the book - as I did Sahota’s earlier novel, China Room (https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/2022/01/review-of-china-room-by-sunjeev-sahota.html).

Note: Please check out my reader's blog (https://schatjesshelves.blogspot.com/) or substack (https://substack.com/@doreenyakabuski) for over 1,100 of my reviews.
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½
This was an excellent read that I highly recommend. Nayan Olek decides to run for union leader of his company he works for. He is pitted against a woman, Megha, who proves a formidable opponent. Things spiral out of control as the two battle for leadership. This proved more interesting that I anticipated, but the more touching and compelling part of the plot concerned Nayan's tragic loss of his young family some years ago, and his newly budding interest in Helen Fletcher and her teen aged son. Poignant and well worth the read.
I read a full third of this book and was very bored. I found the prose and the characters quite bland and there was little momentum to the plot. It centres around a 40-something man, Nayan, vying with a younger ideologically Woke woman for leadership of a union.

Nayan has a sad past: over two decades ago, his mother and child were killed in a fire and his marriage subsequently fell apart. There is a mystery around those deaths, and there’s every indication that the fire was a criminal act. A woman who’s returned to Nayan’s northern town may know something about it. Unfortunately, I didn’t care enough about any of these characters to stick around to find out.

I found this a great disappointment after Sahota’s Booker-nominated show more China Room from a few years back. show less
I read The Year of the Runaways a year or so ago and really enjoyed it so looked forward to this book. I have to say that it did not disappoint. The story line(s), characters and quality of writing are all first class. Well recommended.

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Withheld revelations and dark secrets drive the novel’s family saga and romantic strands. But the story’s engine lies in the union leadership contest between Nayan, who is running on a class-struggle platform, and Megha Sharma, a self-described change candidate fighting for racial equality. They’re both of Indian descent, though Megha hails from a wealthy family while Nayan had a far show more less privileged upbringing....There is an easeful precision to Sahota’s prose reminiscent of Kamila Shamsie and Jhumpa Lahiri, a painful irony that evokes Percival Everett, and a grand human downfall alongside a battle of ideas that is Ibsenesque. show less
added by vancouverdeb
This story of a man running to be union leader in a small Derbyshire town explores grief, guilt and ideological divides.The Spoiled Heart feels genuinely, uncomfortably contemporary – a novel at once unafraid of judgment and admirably concerned about its consequences. Sahota is a political writer in the truest sense, one who understands that in the end, The Spoiled Heart, ultimately, is a show more novel of guilt, and in its closing stages we come to appreciate that its design is in part its message. Without avoiding individual culpability, Sahota builds a forceful portrait of collective moral failure and responsibility. show less
added by vancouverdeb

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Author Information

Picture of author.
5 Works 1,286 Members
Sunjeev Sahota was born in Derbyshire, England in 1981. His novels include Ours Are the Streets and The Year of the Runaways, which was shortlisted for the 2015 Man Booker Prize. (Bowker Author Biography)

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Spoiled Heart
People/Characters
Nayan Olak; Helen Fletcher
Blurbers
Mahajan, Karan; Mathews, Sarah Thankam
Original language
English

Classifications

Genres
General Fiction, Fiction and Literature, Romance
DDC/MDS
823.92Literature & rhetoricEnglish & Old English literaturesEnglish fiction1900-2000-
LCC
PR6119 .A355 .S66Language and LiteratureEnglishEnglish Literature2001-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
74
Popularity
418,891
Reviews
4
Rating
(3.77)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
11
ASINs
3