by Vihanga Senadeera
In 1803, Colonel Edward Ashford leads 240 British soldiers into the interior of Ceylon. The maps are wrong. The roads vanish. The jungle does not notice them.
What the British arrive to claim is a kingdom that has already decided it will not be claimed.
From the disciplined gaze of Rambanda, a village physician who reads a man's breathing more faithfully than any ledger, to the quiet calculations of Arumugam, a Tamil trader hunting a mythical serpent-jewel that may grant the one thing he truly needs, to Swarnamali, whose invisible labours keep the Kandyan palace standing, the people of the hill country continue their ancient work-uninterrupted, unremarked upon, and unyielding.
Told entirely from within the land itself, The Unknown Garden is a luminous, restrained novel of colonial encounter that asks a single, unsettling question: What happens when a place does not require the people who believe they are conquering it?
Drawing on the real history of the early British incursions into the Kandyan Kingdom, Vihanga Senadeera's fifth novel is a story of maps that lie, villages that remember, and a country that simply continues-indifferent, unhurried, and complete without us.
For readers of Amitav Ghosh's The Glass Palace and Hilary Mantel's precise historical gaze, The Unknown Garden is a quietly devastating portrait of empire meeting a landscape that refuses to perform for it.