'Beautifully written and structured, deeply moving, and realised in wise, thoughtful, chiselled prose... it is that rarity: a genuine non-fiction classic' William Dalrymple
From Whiting Award winner Akash Kapur, a transfixing masterwork that probes an unsolved family mystery and portrays a utopian community striving to create a better world.
The quest to build utopia has a long history; in the 1960s, hopes surged as seekers from around the planet founded communities that they hoped would provide alternatives for a strife-torn world. One such community was Auroville, located on a weather-beaten landscape of hard clay and palm trees in coastal South India. Akash Kapurssquo;s stunning book is about what happened when a beautiful young rebel from Belgium, Diane Maes, and a scion from a powerful American family, John Walker, met in Auroville: how they became drawn into the communityisquo;s tumultuous history, and why they died - shockingly, tragically - on the same day.
Founded in 1968 by a French woman known as 'The Mother', Auroville is an aspiring spiritual utopia seeking to reinvent money, government, education and ecology. Now home to 3,000 residents, it is one of the longest-lasting and largest intentional communities in the world. After Dianeesquo;s death, her daughter Auralice was taken in by Johnnsquo;s family, in New York City. She later married Akash, who himself grew up in Auroville. Auralice squo;s understanding of Dianeusquo;s and Johnisquo;s deaths had always been hazy. It was only when Akash and Auralice moved back some thirty years later to Auroville, where they started their own family, that they began to unravel the mysteries that had surrounded those events.
Better to Have Gone blends memoir, history, sociology and politics. It probes the universal idea of utopia, and it portrays in vivid detail the daily life of one particular utopian community. Above all, it is a love story about two doomed and idealistic dreamers. Richly atmospheric and filled with remarkable characters, the book explores timeless questions about faith, idealism, spiritual exploration, as well as the extremism into which these noble impulses so often descend. Spread across time and continents, this is narrative writing of the highest order, a heartbreaking, unforgettable story.