A House for Mr. Biswas, novel by V.S. Naipaul, published in 1961, in which a poor West Indian Hindu achieves his symbol of success and independence—owning his own house.
The novel begins with the death of Mohun Biswas of heart disease at age 46. Mr. Biswas is a descendant of East Indians taken to Trinidad as indentured labourers in the sugarcane fields, and he has been dogged by misfortune and humiliation. Homeless and loveless, he has wandered from place to place, from one type of work to another, with every small success matched by a humiliation. His wife is a member of the vast Tulsi clan, to whom she has always given her loyalty and who have treated him with contempt. Mr. Biswas rashly purchases a ramshackle house that he can ill afford; however, it is his own and represents a declaration of independence from the smothering Tulsis. His death leaves his wife and children penniless. His house stands empty.