& occasionally about other things, too...
Showing posts with label Arvind Adiga. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arvind Adiga. Show all posts

Saturday, December 26, 2009

Best of GAB

I'm busy writing, and haven't finished reading Empire of Illusion.

So, here's an end-of-the-year best of GAB. I've included some explanation to justify the selection.

Best wishes for the New Year.

December 08: Jesus, Jinnah & Atal Behari

(I wrote about my favourite history book Richard Tucker's Ranade and the Roots of Indian Nationalism. Later discovered, reading MJ Akbar's column, that Jinnah had changed his birthday from October 20 to December 25. October 20 is also an important date for me)


January 09:
White Tiger

(Quite simply one of the best books I read this year. Also, my blog comes up in many searches when readers of the book Google the Great Socialist and White Tiger.)


February 09:
Fun Home

(My first adult graphic novel. Amazingly sensitive and touching. I discovered a wonderful art form that economises on words but not on emotions.)


March 09:
Running in the family

(I hadn't read Ondaatje before. This was a great introduction. Then, I read In the Skin of the Lion, the most definitive book on Toronto.)


April 09:
It’s raining

(I always got drenched in the first rains in Mumbai. Tried doing that in Toronto and almost fell ill. Also wrote about Alexander Frater's Chasing the Monsoon. The book has Jawaharlal Nehru's quote about being disappointed with Bombay's monsoon. See the quote below.)

& Nehru on Bombay's monsoon

(Used photographs from Rahul Gandhi's website.)


May:
Asian writers

(Met Jasmine D'Costa for the first time, and read her wonderful collection of short stories Curry is Thicker than Water.)


June :
VS Naipaul

(Reading a master; awestruck.)


July:
Writer as God

(This piece was a result of an intense internal turmoil.)


August:
A Streetcar Named Desire

(Nick Noorani wrote back. I was surprised, overjoyed.)


September:
Festival of South Asian Literature & Arts

(Met MG Vassanji for the first time.)


October:
Princess of Serendip

(I met Dionne Brand a month later; she has a warm heart.)


November:
Canadian Voices

(A marvelous collection of fiction and poetry by new voices in Canada)


December:
Global Soul

(Realised that I'll always be an outsider anywhere I go.)

Wednesday, January 07, 2009

The White Tiger

There's a moment in Arvind Adiga’s The White Tiger that is at once hilarious and poignant. It’s when the Great Socialist – the character is clearly based on Lalu Prasad Yadav, though it is never specified -- visits the high caste landlord’s ancestral home and asks the landlord’s son to hold the spittoon in which he wants to spit. 

When he senses some reluctance and hesitancy, the Lalu character cajoles the landlord’s son, who has to give in to the demand; the Great Socialist then proceeds to spit into the spittoon with a great flourish.

Balram, the low caste protagonist of the novel, is thrilled that his masters are being treated as badly by the Great Socialist, as they routinely (ill)treat him. He explains to the Chinese Primer Wen Jiabao that this was the reason the people of “Darkness” continue to vote the Great Socialist to power. 

The novel's in the form of seven letters that Balram writes to Jiabao over seven days when the latter evinces an interest in visiting India’s Silicon Valley to find out what is it that makes
Bangalore tick. 

Balram (known as Ashok Sharma in his new avatar as an entrepreneur) decides to take it upon himself to make Jiabao understand the true essence of Indian entrepreneurship.

It's seldom that I get to read a novel almost immediately after it wins an award. But thanks to my well-wisher, Myrna Freedman, I just finished reading Arvind Adiga’s debut novel that won the 2008 Man Booker prize.

Unquestionably, it's an impressive novel -- this story of Balram’s rise to infamy and fortune. The son of a rickshaw-puller 
halwai, who becomes a driver to the landlord’s family and then with the landlord’s son emigrates out of “Darkness” to "Light". 

In the process, the innocent driver turns into a murderer and then an entrepreneur.

Adiga tells an ordinary story in an extraordinary manner. He is sardonic, pithy and epigrammatic. Balram’s story is not at all unique, the manner in which it’s told is completely different. Adiga’s originality shines and illuminates the dark recesses of the Indian society that remain hidden because they are inconvenient.

His categorization of all the coastal areas of India that are surrounded by the sea as the area of “Light” and the area through which India’s holiest (and filthiest) river -- 
Ganga runs its course as the area of “Darkness” is serendipitous and marvellously inventive.

More than any other book in recent times 
The White Tiger provides a much-needed, often-missed perspective to the global rise of India as an economic powerhouse. 

It succeeds where non-fiction treatises don’t, even when they are pretty much saying the same thing that Adiga’s book says: That there are 750 million Balrams in India who get crushed by grinding poverty every day.

India’s rise to economic superstardom should not cloud the world’s vision about the grossly unjust society that India is. 

Moreover, fast-paced economic growth is accentuating the divide between the Mr. Ashoks and the Balrams of India. For the likes of Balram murdering their masters seems the only way to survive and grow. 

Why this doesn’t happen in India, Adiga explains, is because obeying orders and adhering to hierarchy are attributes hot-wired into the Indian mind.

Just about the only thing that is unnecessary is the anti-Muslim sentiment that runs through the book, and though Adiga tries to camouflage it with humour, it still is out of place and jarring.

Finally, I can think of only 
Amir Khusro who can belong to the company of Rumi, Iqbal and Mirza Ghalib.