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Book review: The Remnants of Rebellion is a saga of grief, inheritance and the ghosts of revolution

ByPrafula Grace Busi
Published on: Aug 22, 2025 06:00 AM IST

Author Ponnu Elizabeth Mathew debuts with an atmospheric novel that explores the layers of complexities of familial baggage and leaves readers wanting more!

A colonial-era estate sits deep in Kerala’s rubber plantations, heavy with secrets and memory. Into this house, bequeathed to her by her beloved Appacha, walks Aleyamma, 35 years old, dreadlocked, tattooed, agnostic, and to her Malayali family, the very caricature of a starving artist. Much to her surprise, and the chagrin of her clan, she inherits more than just land and timber in Ponnu Elizabeth Mathew’s debut novel, The Remnants of Rebellion.

Cover of Ponnu Elizabeth Mathew's debut book, The Remnants of Rebellion.

Seeking to hold on to what remains of her grandfather, Aleyamma flees her old life for the estate. It is here that the story unfurls, as Ponnu intertwines her present with Appacha’s past — introducing us to Eesho in the 1960s. Timelines merge and the reader is invited to witness how rebellions — personal, political and emotional — ripple across generations.

The author builds this world painstakingly, inspired by her own Malayali Christian upbringing, to create clear-eyed look at the social and political undercurrents in the state. Glimpses of class divides and casteism, that still pervade certain communities across southern India, are derived from lived experiences and well-researched in the mentions of Wagon Tragedy and Mopilla Rebellion of the 1920s as well as the tapper uprisings and Communist wave of the ’50s and ’60s.

Author: Ponnu Elizabeth Mathew

Publisher: Aleph Book Company

Price: 899

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