The Lonely House of Polymol
A story of loneliness, empathy and companionship
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About This Book
**What happens when loneliness finds companionship in the most unlikely place?**
After a lifetime spent working in different parts of India, Shankar Iyer returns to Kochi, Kerala, a retired man gently edged out of relevance by family and time. His wife and children remain in Delhi, calling rarely, remembering him mostly when something is needed. With limited means and nowhere else to go, Shankar settles into a small, avoided house in an upscale neighborhood; cheap, neglected, and spoken of in whispers.
The house is not empty.
It is inhabited by a restless spirit; nameless, genderless, and trapped within its walls, accustomed to driving away anyone who dares to stay. But Shankar does not leave. With no illusions left about life, and nothing more to prove, he stays. He speaks into the silence, sharing memories of childhood, love, responsibility, loss, and the quiet disappointments that shape a life.
Slowly, an unlikely bond forms.
As the spirit, now named Polymol, learns to listen, to understand, and eventually to speak, Shankar finds something he did not know he was still seeking: purpose, relevance, and companionship. Together, they navigate loneliness, aging, abandonment, and empathy, discovering that being heard can sometimes matter more than being remembered.
Set against the gentle rhythms of Kochi, its gardens, streets, birdsong, and fading light, The Lonely House of Polymol is a tender, understated work of literary fiction. It is a story about growing old, about loving without conditions, and about how even the loneliest houses can become homes.
Quiet, humane, and deeply moving, this novel will resonate with readers who believe that loneliness, when met with empathy, can transform into something quietly profound.
After a lifetime spent working in different parts of India, Shankar Iyer returns to Kochi, Kerala, a retired man gently edged out of relevance by family and time. His wife and children remain in Delhi, calling rarely, remembering him mostly when something is needed. With limited means and nowhere else to go, Shankar settles into a small, avoided house in an upscale neighborhood; cheap, neglected, and spoken of in whispers.
The house is not empty.
It is inhabited by a restless spirit; nameless, genderless, and trapped within its walls, accustomed to driving away anyone who dares to stay. But Shankar does not leave. With no illusions left about life, and nothing more to prove, he stays. He speaks into the silence, sharing memories of childhood, love, responsibility, loss, and the quiet disappointments that shape a life.
Slowly, an unlikely bond forms.
As the spirit, now named Polymol, learns to listen, to understand, and eventually to speak, Shankar finds something he did not know he was still seeking: purpose, relevance, and companionship. Together, they navigate loneliness, aging, abandonment, and empathy, discovering that being heard can sometimes matter more than being remembered.
Set against the gentle rhythms of Kochi, its gardens, streets, birdsong, and fading light, The Lonely House of Polymol is a tender, understated work of literary fiction. It is a story about growing old, about loving without conditions, and about how even the loneliest houses can become homes.
Quiet, humane, and deeply moving, this novel will resonate with readers who believe that loneliness, when met with empathy, can transform into something quietly profound.
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