Kamala Markandaya (born 1924, Chimakurti, India—died May 16, 2004, London, England) was an Indian novelist whose works concern the struggles of contemporary Indians with conflicting Eastern and Western values.
A Brahman, Markandaya studied at the University of Madras, then worked as a journalist. In 1948 she settled in England and later married an Englishman. Her first novel, Nectar in a Sieve (1954), an Indian peasant’s narrative of her difficult life, remains Markandaya’s most popular work. Her next book, Some Inner Fury (1955), is set in 1942 during the Indian struggle for independence. It portrays the troubled relationship between an educated Indian woman, whose brother is an anti-British terrorist, and a British civil servant who loves her. Marriage provides the setting for a conflict of values in A Silence of Desire (1960), in which a religious middle-class woman seeks medical treatment, without her husband’s knowledge, from a Hindu faith healer rather than from a doctor.
In Markandaya’s fiction Western values typically are viewed as modern and materialistic and Indian values as traditional and spiritual. She examined this dichotomy in Possession (1963), in which an Indian shepherd-turned-artist is sent to England, where he is nearly destroyed by an aristocratic British woman. Later works by Markandaya include A Handful of Rice (1966), The Coffer Dams (1969), The Nowhere Man (1972), Two Virgins (1973), The Golden Honeycomb (1977), and Pleasure City (1982; also published as Shalimar).