Guest post by Piroj Wadia
Cities form an interesting backdrop for
books and films. Woody Allen has done a trilogy of three cities – Vicky Cristina Barcelona, Midnight in Paris
and  To Rome With Love. While two anthology
films - Paris, Je t'aime   (Paris, I love you) and  New York, I Love You brought together
international film talent to make a set of short films on each city. Closer to
home,  the opening credits of Chetan
Anand’s Taxi Driver which
starred  Dev Anand
and Kalpana Kartik scrolled to the legend ‘and above all the city of Bombay’.
In recent times, a small budget film called
Aamir, a thriller whizzed
through the downside of the Mumbai – through the galli guchis (lanes and
bylanes)  and showcased an altogether
seamier vista of the city. On the flipside Bollywood and Indian television have
shown the glitzy face of the city over and over again.  
Literature too has exposed the city as a
backdrop. The city, notably the heart of the city with its cheek by jowl
buildings, lanes and bylanes intersecting found their references in the works
of Sadat Hasan Manto. Salman Rushdie,  Suketu Mehta, Rohinton Mistry, and others  have also set their stories in Bombay/Mumbai.
Two recent books join the list.   Yasmeen Premji’s Days of Gold & Sepia,
a  saga  
which spans Bombay
of the 19th  century  to Mumbai of the  21st century;  and Piyush Jha’s Mumbaistan which is a set of
three novellas set in  contemporary
Mumbai. In both books, the city is a character which keeps pace with the
narrative, especially in the case of Days of Gold and Sepia. Take away the city
and there is no story. Coincidentally, both writers mark their debuts.
 Though Lalljee Lakhia, is a fictional
character, there is a deja-vu about him,  the city of Bombay stands shoulder to shoulder as a
co-character.   Yasmeen Premji's narrative begins in a remote village of Ketch, where we meet Lalljee,  a  six-year-old orphan,  leaving behind his siblings, to work for   his
uncle.  When  fruition of a requited   love (for his cousin Reshma) eludes him, as
an orphaned poor relative he wasn’t suitable. 
This has Laljee   resolve:  that he would become so rich and powerful that
nothing he cherished would ever delude him. 
From Kutch, he travels to Bombay
on foot, empty pockets and  dreams, the
year is  1877. The city was a salve
to  Lalljee’s  old wounds:  Bombay
didn’t care about  your caste or creed, it
mattered not  whether you were a pauper
or a king, for the city welcomed everyone and anyone with wide open arms.  The Laljee Lakhias amassed their fortunes  in this city   where   schemes, ambitions and dreams were
realized,  fortune lurked round corners.
Though Lalljee Lakhia, is a fictional
character, there is a deja-vu about him,  the city of Bombay stands shoulder to shoulder as a
co-character.   Yasmeen Premji's narrative begins in a remote village of Ketch, where we meet Lalljee,  a  six-year-old orphan,  leaving behind his siblings, to work for   his
uncle.  When  fruition of a requited   love (for his cousin Reshma) eludes him, as
an orphaned poor relative he wasn’t suitable. 
This has Laljee   resolve:  that he would become so rich and powerful that
nothing he cherished would ever delude him. 
From Kutch, he travels to Bombay
on foot, empty pockets and  dreams, the
year is  1877. The city was a salve
to  Lalljee’s  old wounds:  Bombay
didn’t care about  your caste or creed, it
mattered not  whether you were a pauper
or a king, for the city welcomed everyone and anyone with wide open arms.  The Laljee Lakhias amassed their fortunes  in this city   where   schemes, ambitions and dreams were
realized,  fortune lurked round corners.   
Laljee’s life and times are skillfully intertwined
with events which occurred in that span of time.   As
Lalljee goes from a helper at a kirana shop to a textile mill owner, trader in opium, and landlord at large, the book
chronicles the history of a new India
-- spanning Bal Gangadhar Tilak's call for swaraj to Muhammad Ali Jinnah's
fictional request to Lalljee to come to Pakistan. It also tells the story
of the mosquito infested seven islands merging to form Bombay, the urbs prima. Just like the city,
Laljee’s story  is an  elegant, but simple narrative, where characters
connect, separate,  and  reconnect seamlessly. Lalljee Lakhia could
well be one of the countless migrant fortune seekers who made Bombay their home and gave so much of their
blood, sweat and toil to the city’s growth.  Days of Gold & Sepia is the story of  a city which grew as per the needs of its
growing populace to shelter the bedraggled fortune seeker and exchanges the
rags to riches.
A difficult  narrative  with its huge canvas enriched  with multiple characters,    Yasmeen Premji does that with élan, despite being
a debutante. The richness and lucidity of language is in sync  with the  vibrant characters,  which jump out of the pages of the book. All
through the read, one envisions Bombay
of the days gone by.  The story is told
in flashback by Lalljee’s granddaughter Shahina, as his formidable mansion in
Breach Candy making way for a multi-storied building. A regular occurrence  in the morphing cityscape  of Mumbai,-- 
 as the city of gold is now known   old stately, charming mansions are demolished
 for more chrome and glass buildings – to
make it the city of chrome. 
 
 
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