A House For Mr. Biswas (1961) Is the Critical Novel of V. S. Naipaul Which Accomplished Overall Notoriety. Naipaul Presents a Reliable Picture of Social Reality In the Non-Western Existence Where Seized Individuals Search Their Personality. It Is the Novel About a Trinidadian Hindu Who Enormously Wants to Have His Own House. the Hero Mr. Biswas Battles For Convenience, Completeness, Request and Roots. the Novel Has Components of High Parody and Shocking Sentiment Has Gotten Firmly Connected With Naipaul's Very Own Quest For Significance and Network Regardless of Distancing Impacts of Expansionism. the Novel Can Be Perused on Various Levels. Indeed, Even With No Unique Accentuation on Its Recorded Setting, It Actually Remains Constant As a Novel About Disappointment and Lamentable Weakness That Lies at the Center of All Human Life. the Traveler Thinks to Have His Own House In an Outsider Land. Home Isn't Just Where One Lives. It Is One's Personality Public, Social, Profound. Home Is the Place Where One Has a Place. the Dirt Has Supported One's Body and Soul. Home Is a Security. Home Is the Spot With Which We Get Profound Delight.