A major Hindi novel of migration and women’s lives, The Fire Sacrifice returns in a powerful new translation by Jerry Pinto, offering a sharply intimate portrait of the Indian diaspora in America.
As New Year arrives in New York, Guddo prepares a havan—a fire offering— she has put off for a decade, too busy surviving to risk smoke alarms, neighbours, and memory. As family crowds into her apartment, the mantras she recites begin to loosen the past: a widow remade into an immigrant; a proud life of “respectability” traded for the humiliations of subway platforms, night shifts, cramped rooms, and the unspoken accounting that governs even sisterhood.
Guddo came to America for her children’s future. What she finds instead is the slow, bruising cost of arrival: the erosion of old certainties, the sharp bargains of work and citizenship, and a generation growing up between languages and loyalties—hungry for freedom, status, and speed. In the city’s relentless churn, love can turn transactional, care can become leverage, and danger can flash, sudden and intimate, in the spaces meant to be ordinary.
Told with unsparing clarity and fierce compassion, The Fire Sacrifice is a landmark novel of the Indian diaspora, newly translated from the Hindi by Jerry Pinto. A portrait of migration not as reinvention but as trial, it asks what must be offered to the flames—and what, if anything, survives the fire.
Susham Bedi (1945–2020) was a Hindi novelist, short-story writer, and poet, and a professor of Hindi literature at Columbia University, New York. Writing primarily in Hindi, she was among the earliest and most incisive chroniclers of the South Asian diaspora, known for her psychologically acute portraits of migration, identity, and cultural dislocation. Her work has been widely translated, and she was honoured by the Sahitya Akademi and the Uttar Pradesh Hindi Sansthan for her contribution to Hindi literature.
Jerry Pinto is the author of Em and the Big Hoom (winner of the Hindu Prize and the Crossword Book Award), Murder in Mahim, and the nonfiction classic Helen: The Life and Times of an H-Bomb (winner of the National Award for Best Book on Cinema). He has translated from Marathi Daya Pawar’s Baluta and memoirs by Malika Amar Shaikh and Vandana Mishra. Pinto teaches journalism in Mumbai and serves on the board of Meljol. He is a recipient of the Windham-Campbell Prize and the Sahitya Akademi Award.
A major Hindi novel of migration and women’s lives, The Fire Sacrifice returns in a powerful new translation by Jerry Pinto, offering a sharply intimate portrait of the Indian diaspora in America.
As New Year arrives in New York, Guddo prepares a havan—a fire offering— she has put off for a decade, too busy surviving to risk smoke alarms, neighbours, and memory. As family crowds into her apartment, the mantras she recites begin to loosen the past: a widow remade into an immigrant; a proud life of “respectability” traded for the humiliations of subway platforms, night shifts, cramped rooms, and the unspoken accounting that governs even sisterhood.
Guddo came to America for her children’s future. What she finds instead is the slow, bruising cost of arrival: the erosion of old certainties, the sharp bargains of work and citizenship, and a generation growing up between languages and loyalties—hungry for freedom, status, and speed. In the city’s relentless churn, love can turn transactional, care can become leverage, and danger can flash, sudden and intimate, in the spaces meant to be ordinary.
Told with unsparing clarity and fierce compassion, The Fire Sacrifice is a landmark novel of the Indian diaspora, newly translated from the Hindi by Jerry Pinto. A portrait of migration not as reinvention but as trial, it asks what must be offered to the flames—and what, if anything, survives the fire.
Susham Bedi (1945–2020) was a Hindi novelist, short-story writer, and poet, and a professor of Hindi literature at Columbia University, New York. Writing primarily in Hindi, she was among the earliest and most incisive chroniclers of the South Asian diaspora, known for her psychologically acute portraits of migration, identity, and cultural dislocation. Her work has been widely translated, and she was honoured by the Sahitya Akademi and the Uttar Pradesh Hindi Sansthan for her contribution to Hindi literature.
Jerry Pinto is the author of Em and the Big Hoom (winner of the Hindu Prize and the Crossword Book Award), Murder in Mahim, and the nonfiction classic Helen: The Life and Times of an H-Bomb (winner of the National Award for Best Book on Cinema). He has translated from Marathi Daya Pawar’s Baluta and memoirs by Malika Amar Shaikh and Vandana Mishra. Pinto teaches journalism in Mumbai and serves on the board of Meljol. He is a recipient of the Windham-Campbell Prize and the Sahitya Akademi Award.
Subscribe to get Email Updates!
Thanks for subscribing.
Your response has been recorded.

"We Believe In The Power of Books" Our mission is to make books accessible to everyone, and to cultivate a culture of reading and learning. We strive to provide a wide range of books, from classic literature, sci-fi and fantasy, to graphic novels, biographies and self-help books, so that everyone can find something to read.
Whether you’re looking for your next great read, a gift for someone special, or just browsing, Midland is here to make your book-buying experience easy and enjoyable.