Description

Book Synopsis

Evening Standard's Wander List Guide to 2019 Getaways

"A beautiful, brilliant modern classic." Sabrina Mahfouz, Guardian, Best Summer Books 2018

Neha has just been diagnosed with the same terminal cancer that killed her mother. Was this her destiny? She codes a computer program to find out, one that intricately maps out her entire life and the lives of those closest to her: her dad, who left Kenya for windblown northern England; her brother, a struggling comedian whose star is finally beginning to rise; her grandmother, who lost the man she loved to racist violence. By understanding the past, Neha hopes to come to terms with her present - and reckon with her family's and her country's future.



Trade Review
I loved it. It's wise and absorbing and the voices of all the characters are so incredibly distinct. A triumph. * Louise O’Neill, author of 'Almost Love and Asking For It' *
Funny, profound and by far Shukla's most ambitious novel to date. * Alfred Hickling, Guardian *
Fascinating, funny and thoughtful. * Bernardine Evaristo, Observer *
A wise and moving novel about family, love and the people we're destined to be. * Stylist, 'April's best new books' *
Intelligent, devastating and gorgeously entertaining, this is a novel that expresses its anger with just the right level of fun. * Financial Times *
A funny, moving novel about what we inherit and what we create for ourselves. * Sunday Times, Best Summer Reads 2018 *
Very funny but packs a hell of an emotional punch. It's an intimate epic, spanning continents and decades but rooted in the internal life of its characters. * Nish Kumar, stand-up comedian and actor *
Written with such vitality that it lives beyond its ending. * i Magazine *
A beautifully written and thought-provoking piece of work, which balances humour, anger and melancholy in a way that is charming and utterly engrossing. * The List *
The novel captures the changing faces of racism with memorable vividness. * Sunday Times *
Be utterly transported by this wonderfully written tale of family, immigration and family bonds. * Emerald Street *
A beautiful, brilliant modern classic. * Sabrina Mahfouz, Guardian best summer reads 2018 *
This is an epic tale... but it always feels intimate * Stylist *
Funny and profound * Guardian *

The One Who Wrote Destiny

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    RRP £8.99 – you save £0.45 (5%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Tue 23 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Nikesh Shukla

    1 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of The One Who Wrote Destiny by Nikesh Shukla

      Publisher: Atlantic Books
      Publication Date: 07/02/2019
      ISBN13: 9781786492807, 978-1786492807
      ISBN10: 1786492806

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Evening Standard's Wander List Guide to 2019 Getaways

      "A beautiful, brilliant modern classic." Sabrina Mahfouz, Guardian, Best Summer Books 2018

      Neha has just been diagnosed with the same terminal cancer that killed her mother. Was this her destiny? She codes a computer program to find out, one that intricately maps out her entire life and the lives of those closest to her: her dad, who left Kenya for windblown northern England; her brother, a struggling comedian whose star is finally beginning to rise; her grandmother, who lost the man she loved to racist violence. By understanding the past, Neha hopes to come to terms with her present - and reckon with her family's and her country's future.



      Trade Review
      I loved it. It's wise and absorbing and the voices of all the characters are so incredibly distinct. A triumph. * Louise O’Neill, author of 'Almost Love and Asking For It' *
      Funny, profound and by far Shukla's most ambitious novel to date. * Alfred Hickling, Guardian *
      Fascinating, funny and thoughtful. * Bernardine Evaristo, Observer *
      A wise and moving novel about family, love and the people we're destined to be. * Stylist, 'April's best new books' *
      Intelligent, devastating and gorgeously entertaining, this is a novel that expresses its anger with just the right level of fun. * Financial Times *
      A funny, moving novel about what we inherit and what we create for ourselves. * Sunday Times, Best Summer Reads 2018 *
      Very funny but packs a hell of an emotional punch. It's an intimate epic, spanning continents and decades but rooted in the internal life of its characters. * Nish Kumar, stand-up comedian and actor *
      Written with such vitality that it lives beyond its ending. * i Magazine *
      A beautifully written and thought-provoking piece of work, which balances humour, anger and melancholy in a way that is charming and utterly engrossing. * The List *
      The novel captures the changing faces of racism with memorable vividness. * Sunday Times *
      Be utterly transported by this wonderfully written tale of family, immigration and family bonds. * Emerald Street *
      A beautiful, brilliant modern classic. * Sabrina Mahfouz, Guardian best summer reads 2018 *
      This is an epic tale... but it always feels intimate * Stylist *
      Funny and profound * Guardian *

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