Saturday, May 29, 2010

Migration

The Illiterati Book Club decided to scale up on presentation and with the help of a kindly wellwisher have a new site on wordpress. The link is http://illiteratibookclub.wordpress.com Interested visitors may visit the new site henceforth as we wont update on this site any more.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO BY STIEG LARSSON

Present : Indira, Pakhi, Susmita, Madhusree,Gita, Sakun ( fleeting appearance) Georgie ( new member of The Illiterati – Photo as second follower on the top right )
It happened to be the in thing again. Habitat Centre was having a special feature on Swedish detective literature crowned by a screening of the film of this book.
Story :
Huge protest all round... Sakun in spite of owning the book for over six months started for the nth time and conceded defeat after 15 pages - again. Gita was indignant... she went for a holiday armed only with this book and it must have cost an effort to stuff the thick volume in the luggage only to start and find herself unable to proceed beyond the first few pages. What a punishment!
As for me, I waded stoically through the pages and felt criminally guilty on having foisted it on the others.
The fact is, the beginning and a lot afterwards is terrifically boring... it reads like a research report quoting statistics and explaining the background like a professor. We cannot forget that the author is primarily a journalist and has not gone beyond journalistic reporting as far as literary style is concerned.
However those who manage to plough on till the heroine arrives on the scene are eventually rewarded with an interesting persona, almost an icon of..... well, an iconoclast. The story that emerges of an old unsolved case of the disappearance presumed death of a young girl on an island (closed room mystery) and its unfolding link with some serial murders is clever and the final denouement is sufficiently cataclysmic to be satisfying the purpose of a suspense thriller. I find however that the theme of perversion and sadism especially sexual and against women in particular, is something I can do without. The good ole crime novels of Christie, and Sayers, Edgar Wallace, Ngaio Marsh etc. though full of murders , sometimes grisly , are somehow ‘clean’ and don’t make your insides roil and think of common society as a sickening place. Perhaps its supposed to reflect modern society as a well of corruption and sickness. Maybe a modern obsession with this side of human behaviour because a lot of modern crime fiction and thrillers do reflect sexual, psychological perversion as the source of most crime. Even P.D. James a most polished and literary crime novelist uses this to fuel her plots. But, and here we all chorused, that such graphic detail and the entire ‘basement torture chamber episode’ was too much... There is enough of it in newspapers and real life. Shudder ...the Nithari murders come to mind.
Characters :
In the process we are presented with a picture of a society and culture with which I for one am not familiar, but which I have understood to be one of the most economically and sociologically advanced countries in the world with a reputation for gender equality and enlightened government sponsored social welfare.
Well, one gets to know a little more than that broad sketch...Despite the institutional social welfare which, the author states, functions well on the whole, there are loopholes . While Palmgren represents one end of the spectrum, a citizen with a conscience who gets the best out of the system on behalf of unfortunates, there are also people like Advokat Bjurman who abuse their position of power. The real interest in this book is Lisbeth. She is a ward of state and the responsibility of a social system which acknowledges its obligations to the weaker sections. But these social institutions persist in looking upon her as a victim ,as a person with no choice or control on her fate. In fact the system through Bjurman actually immobilises her control over her own actions . Lisbeth herself refuses to be victimised time and again. She doesn’t see herself as a victim and rejects this hypothesis by her total disdain and non-cooperation with the processes.
Pakhi: she has a strong sense of morality - there is only goodness and evil - right and wrong. That is how she defines her past . Before the Evil Happened. We are not told what that is in this book but I ‘m sure this develops over the sequels. And that is why she takes justice into her own hands... sort of avenging angel. But as Pakhi noticed , she doesn’t go for the kill physically. Its not death that is the penalty. More like an eye for an eye and tooth for a tooth. She thinks that Mikael’s psychological analyses of criminal behaviour mitigate the sheer reality of the effect of evil . Somebody is badly abused, sadistically killed. Why look for reasons for the behaviour? For her , there is only an urgent need to stop any further evil . This unequivocal attitude reflects in her relationships. Borders are defined very early on in a relationship and if she cant adhere to it she abandons it abruptly.
None of the other characters including the second most important i.e. Mikael though detailed well enough, appear somewhat stiff. Lisbeth breathes life.
Pakhi : Fact is, the real interest is created only with the advent Lisbeth and her taking a hand in Mikael’s investigations.
Plot :
Consensus opinion that the ‘detection’ part of the novel is a disappointment. It relies on too many coincidences and the only basis for the breakthrough is a photo analysis which is a little esoteric though Indu thought it rather clever. Would be more accurate to call this a thriller rather than a detective story.
Universality etc. :
The sociological theme is interesting : the themes of narcissism and women abuse , anti capitalism and defects of a state sponsored welfare system are all interwoven and becomes too loaded.
Susmita : All of us identify well with Lisbeth who is an enormously empowered and independent woman and not susceptible to sexist definitions. Is it because we are independent and empowered women whose self image is not linked to gender imposed stereotypes? Why is such a character the hero? Normally society does not accept such non-conformity.
Followed a lively dialogue on non conformist women and how society’s reaction to them is always sexist.
Style :
The horror of Martin and his father’s crimes are graphic ally described and all of the shock value is based on perverted sexuality. Was this necessary ? Is contemporary society so jaded that only sexual perversion, sadism and brutal violence can capture the attention of readers?
Pakhi : Perhaps that was the author’s way of showing the dysfunctionality of personalities like Martin and the seamy side of society.
Rather extreme then. I incline to the idea that its a substitute for original creative thought on the part of the author. ,Sensationalism is easy!
Style as said before, is very wooden – investigative journalism rather than creative fiction. There are however enough loose threads to engender interest for a sequel.. the Wennerstrom affair and Lisbeth’s unexplained past for example.The ending is fun, reminiscent of Archer’s twist in the tail.
Conclusion:
Thumbs up for the character of Lisbeth !
But the book either drags boringly or jerks you awake with horror and disgust. Unsatisfying!

Sunday, March 28, 2010

The Palace of Illusions by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni

THE PALACE OF ILLUSIONS by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni
We expected this session to be long . In fact, it would have been unending if we didn’t have to vacate the premises .
After all, this was about the woman, the one who should have been the most empowered and yet whose life was one long agonised cry of frustration and helplessness ‘Why me ?’
The initial problem for the book club was to unentangle the novel from the epic Mahabharata.
Story :
Pakhi who was on her way to see a Manipuri play on Draupadi,(incidentally there were as many as three separate Draupadi based plays running in town this week) claimed to be unaware of the legendary facts due to her non Hindu upbringing and had fundamental questions regarding the epic version of events and the point of view in the novel. Our efforts to educate her in ten minutes was enlightening for all of us since it brought the novel into perspective and provided me an opportunity to air my cursory research based on Irawati Karve’s conclusions given in her book Yuganta. Karve was a sociologist and scholar who has studied somewhat the authenticity of sources for the epic. Pakhi’s questions echoed many of ours and therefore we spent a lot of time on the epic story first. Lets clear up some issues about the story behind the The Palace of Illusions .
The novel follows the epic version quite closely with regard to the story and the basic relationships of the characters to each other. The most glaring point of difference is Draupadi’s secret crush on Karna which is a central thread in the novel. Irawati Karve says that the episode of Karna competing in her swayamvar is not authentic but a later interpolation. The rest of the epic also does not mention any attraction mutual or otherwise though some accounts could be considered hinting it.
Traditionally most of us are under the impression that Arjuna was Draupadi’s first and true love which is supposed to be the reason why Draupadi could not enter heaven in her body in the Mahaprasthan episode. Divakaruni ‘s develops the Draupadi-Karna angle extensively thereby rendering a whole new dimension and adding more emotional depth to Draupadi and highlighting her vulnerability.
Draupadi’s relationship with Krishna also figures importantly in traditional accounts and is given its due here. Divakaruni deviates in her embroidery on the Karna relationship but otherwise follows the epic pretty faithfully . So much for the story .
But what colours and nuances she adds to the picture, what depth and perspective!
Charatcer :
Now we can get down to our reaction to Divakaruni’s Draupadi. We all had so much to say :
Pakhi : (She a left a typed sheet of points ) Draupadi a woman of many contradictions ; a woman of substance and not a pawn in a male dominated society.
On the one hand a woman of destiny born for a purpose but brought up as a mere woman schooled for ‘womanly’ pursuits. She garners her scholarship by listening in on her brother’s lessons and through her closeness to him develops her wider political perspective. Incidentally the brother- sister relationship is also very tenderly depicted and is a cornerstone of her character. The orthodox upbringing fails to curb the independent and rebellious spirit which rages at the male centric order of society which makes a plaything of woman in general and her in particular.
In fact the crux of the portrayal is the sheer contrast and irony of a hugely intelligent, iron-willed, passionate , intensely loyal, dutiful, learned , independent minded and eventually wise woman, and the fact that she is always a pawn :- to her circumstances of birth, her marriage or rather marriages, her father’s life purpose, husbands’ political position, their personal weaknesses and the sheer fact of being of the female gender. The disrobing incident would never have happened if she had been a man. This is the ultimate hurt to a woman’s spirit and self-respect. Divakaruni conveys again and again that Draupadi is ever thrust into events and circumstances over which she has no control and which is none of her doing . She has to adjust repeatedly to circumstances beyond normal parameters – marriage to five brothers and a responsibility to keep them united; hostile in-laws and virtually no emotional support from anybody including her husbands who are too busy upholding dharma ; or her mother in law who could have done better but has baggage of her own. Swept along by the fatal alchemy of the passivity of her righteous husbands and the aggressive ambition and greed of the Kauravs she suffers personal humiliation, loss of princely comforts, home, and finally the loss of family and children. One thing after another. It seems that fate really emptied the dregs on her. So random. Divakaruni compellingly conveys Draupadi feelings of this helplessness at the hands of fate and her vain rage against it. The source of her temper and anger , her revengefulness could be the fact that she has never been allowed to take charge of her own life.
In the victory of Kurulkshetra Draupadi is faced with a devastated kingdom depleted of all vitality, a kingdom of widows and orphans and despoilers. The realisation and sense of futility is complete.
I think that the crux of the novel is that despite her enormous character and substance she is always a pawn , always an object to be bartered, shared, used and made a scapegoat .
Susmita : What if Draupadi were a man?
Certainly one can see her holding pride of place among the mighty heroes of the Mahabharata. She reacts to all situations from a clearcut intellectual, rational point of view. ( Hate to say masculine ) Even during her worst moment being publicly humiliated she doesn’t appeal to the assembled elders from a position of weakness.... she asks about rights. ( Observation made by Irawati Karve, btw) Does Yudhishtir have the power stake her etc. instead of saying help me. When nobody answers she does not break down , she curses and swears vengeance. As a man,I suppose she would not have been in any way remarkable because she would not have been challenged in this way.
Krishnaa and Krishna : Susmita thinks that they are in a way two sides of the same coin e.g male /female principle... she is a part of Krishna just as Arjun is, hence the strong subliminal bond. Krishna is her better self and probably why she has the freedom to do be herself. Krishna gave her confidence in herself from the time he said they were both dark. Draupadi is passionate, hasty, proud, vindictive and earthy, rooted in the worldly stage of action and events. Krishna is omniscient, empowered , indeed the grand puppeteer himself and no one more on a string than Panchali. He has wisdom and possesses knowledge of spiritual reality. Grooms Draupadi for Arjun .
They end up calling each other Sakha and Sakhi which is difficult to translate in English. Not a romantic connection but certainly almost mystic. We get the impression that Draupadi was a bhakt rather in the style of Meera, something we are very familiar with in the Hindu tradition. Also modern women would recognise an assexual ‘best friend’ situation.
We all agreed that the relationship is beyond gender.
Indu, Gita, Shakun : The Pandavas are not very well sketched as individuals.
All: Draupadi didn’t think much of her husbands. They appear to be more of her responsibility rather than spouses to whom she is a first priority.
Probably appears that way because we are seeing them as impressions, through D’s eyes and feelings. After all no man is a hero to his wife and his valet. The brothers are basically peace loving and unambitious. On a personal level they accord D the respect and consideration which is her due, but take her pretty much for granted. They have to periodically be pepped up by family and friends to go claim their inheritance ; otherwise they are quite happy to live in exile and pursue their own personal interests. We realise why Draupadi needs to stoke their fires up to the War because how could one let injustice prevail? This is the moral of the story - that tolerance of injustice only breeds more injustice.
All : Draupadi much more grounded and real than a Sita or some of the other legendary heroines. Appeals to us contemporary women.
Plot
Some said it was jumpy but that is inevitable given the vast canvas. What the author resorts to is a picture of Draupadi’s mental landscape to hold the thread together. She doesn’t waste time actually describing events as a third party. Instead we gather what happened from the heroine’s reaction to the events. This comes out beautifully in the description of life after the War and serves to highlight Draupadi’s compassion and maturity as a woman mellowed by life .
Gita : The secret crush on Karna is beautifully brought out adding a whole dimension through an entirely internal dialogue within Draupadi.
Also the subtlety of the last episode where D realises that Bhima had truly loved her the way she yearned and the greatness , generosity and chivalry of Yudhishtir( too often unappreciated and devalued by her) in not revealing her guilty secret. These touches make her come alive as a strong but emotional and vulnerable woman. In the end she recognises his greatness which she didn’t throughout her life.
Indira : Remarkable how so many of the so called miraculous effects /divine weapons and so on, are to modern eyes the equivalent of sophisticated weapons like self-guided missiles etc. that we know of today.
This has been said of both the epics and is certainly more credible to us than to readers of a hundred years ago.
Universality
This portrait of Draupadi would strike a chord in every modern woman . Do we not face the same need for empowerment in a man’s world, the same sense of betrayal by the society even when we play by the given rules.
Rhythm and Style
The author has used the first person singular narrative to give a very intimate and personal rendering not of the events of the story but of the feelings, thoughts and personal evolution of the central character. Light and natural touch.
It is impossible to stop talking about such an interesting subject so interestingly rendered.
Conclusion
Resounding thump and thumbs up with bells on.
I beg pardon if I have not done justice to the views expressed by all members.
Please post comments to complete.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Chowringhee by Sankar

CHOWRINGHEE by Sankar
5th February 2010
Present : Indira, Pakhi, Runa, Gita, Susmita

Welcome to the two new members Gita and Susmita. Madhushree was content to remain an onlooker for the time being.

I was struck by the way eyes lit up when starting the discussion. Obviously the book inspired enthusiasm. Sankar, alias Mani Shankar Mukherjee, wrote ‘Chowringhee’ in 1962 and it was published in the same year. The English translation however was published only in 2008. This preoccupation with dates arose during the discussion because even after more than 50 years since it was written , it was apparent that our sense of identification with the novel and its impact was very immediate. Plus we wanted to fix the context: the story is set in the fifties. This is important. It was Calcutta (not yet Kolkatta) in its heydays, before its inexorable decline economic, political, cultural, social. When it was a gracious city with its expansive Maidan, rolling Central Avenue, chic and sophisticated Park Street and Theatre Road, grand mansions and Victorian houses in Alipore ; when streets would be hosed down every morning, and in spite of the bustling crowd of a metropolis and erstwhile capital. Poverty existed of course, but in the back streets, bleak and sordid, but the city was still not overrun with the post Partition teeming millions of refugees and the resultant criminalisation of the poor which eventually changed the demographics , politics and economy of Calcutta and the state.

The story depicts the life of a great hotel ,the varying clientele who pass through its doors with their own separate motivations, desires, sorrows and triumphs as well as a picture of the people who function to service the needs of guests , their public personas and their private personalities. It is a microcosm of the city, past and present wihtin the entire range of society from the richest and most powerful, to the dregs of the back slums. The different threads of separate stories , characters and events are held together in the narrator, Shankar, in the style of a sutradhar. The story unfolds through the prism of his perception and he not only describes but also evaluates. He is also however,a character in his own right ,young, inexperienced ,in urgent need to make a living and a fundamental ability to like people and be liked in return. His simplicity and innocent idealism infuses the entire story with an ineffable charm.
The story reflects the typical Bengali psyche : affluence and riches are almost synonymous with corruption and venality whereas the milk of human kindness and common humanity is found amidst the stench and rot of society’s lowest rungs. The ending is essentially tragic in that all the more endearing and noble characters suffer through death or deprivation of some sort and are forced eventually to exit Hotel Shahjahan the main stage where their lives play out their fate. Shankar himself, almost randomly, loses his job and the story ends with him fading into the Calcutta night saddened, disillusioned but .... not in despair. His refusal to lose hope in humanity and reassertion to believe in life resurgent is like a small flame in the dark and is the keynote of the book.

The characters are many larger than life. Pakhi’s professional experience in a Calcutta hotel vouched for the authenticity of many characters behind the scenes, while it is common knowledge that some of the prominent clients of Shahjahan are modelled on well known real life personalities of the day.
To discuss all the major characters would require reams. Just to record some comments from the members – Susmita remarked how Marco Polo is the quintessential hero to the Bengali psyche: a foreigner whose generosity of heart embraces/rescues the downtrodden – witness Anthony Firinghee, Mother Teresa, Sister Nivedita, C.P. Andrews to name a few. To Pakhi he recalls the soldier of fortune a la Grahame Greene. Connie , the example of a fallen woman with a heart of gold ; Gomes the artist forced to trivialise his talents.
And of course the king pin of the book, Sata Bose... suave, quick witted, and with a world weary savoire faire , accepting the hypocrisy and corruption of his clientele with equanimity. Yet thoroughly sympathetic and kind and genuinely helpful to those in need . It’s not for nothing that Shankar looks up to him as his guru and role model. A lot of the humour and wit in the book is due to his pithy remarks.
All characters are a mixture of the good , the bad and the weak and vulnerable which makes us relate to them very easily.
One small factor worth noting is that this is a novel without a central heroine. There are memorable female characters but none who is central as compared to the tradition of authors like Tagore and Sarat Chandra who wrote many novels which were heroine centric.

Universality – Indira declared the canvas to be almost epical - no doubt as to the intellectual depth as being in a totally different class from our last book The Immigrant. No doubt at all as to the timelessness and wider appeal of this book. We started talking about how Mumbai was going the same way... maybe any large city where material success is paramount would have the same effect. Bigger socio political and spiritual issues are hinted at throughout – People who lose their moral authority also lose their right to life in this milieu – they fade away , as I have mentioned earlier.

Style as mentioned earlier, very picaresque and brilliant use made of the traditional Indian Sutradhar figure which allows the narrative enormous flexibility so that themes can weave back and forth and connections can be made to appear resulting in a canvas of immense richness and with hundreds of nuances of colour , light and shade. Humour and a gentle tolerance leavens everything, though as a Bengali I think some of the humour was lost in translation.

Rhythm is smooth and flowing and it is an easy and page turning read despite being a translation.
Vote : Thumbs up

Friday, February 5, 2010

The Immigrant by Manju Kapur

8TH JANUARY 2010
Members present: Indira, Pakhi, Runa .
We have decided to record our lively discussions on the selected books. Since some structure is necessary to make the account coherent I have adopted , out of sheer convenience, the seven aspects which, according to E.M. Forster, need to be examined while evaluating a novel. These are :
• Story – basic purpose of a novel is telling a story, stringing events together to fulfill a purpose.
• Characters- Flat/ round, life like or puppets.
• Plot- sense of suspense and building up a need to know what happens next.
• Fantasy and Prophecy are rather intangible elements which together provide value to the story,contributes a sense of ‘spirituality’ and ‘universality’ which gives depth and makes for greatness.
• Pattern – structure of the novel. Not to be over rated.
• Rhythm - a pattern of repetition and variation giving a pleasing sense of expansiveness.
(As defined by E.M Forster)
So here goes……
Story
This story is about a single professional woman in straitened circumstances with family responsibilities to whom marriage appears to be the passport to love, security and fulfillment. She is a product of her society. But marriage when it happens, does not deliver any of these and Nina discovers that the only thing she has to rely on is herself and the need to adapt to circumstances and go forward.
We might even ask why the title is The Immigrant ; Portrait of a Marriage might have been more apt. While the immigrant experience is described through the different perspectives of Nina and Anand , the main theme is really a story of personal growth.

Characters
Characters of both protagonists and the minor characters are familiar ‘types’ to us . All of us have known Ninas and Anands, people like Alka and her IAS husband, Nina’s mother, Anand’s uncle etc.etc. But the mental landscape particularly of the two main character , has not been plumbed adequately. Nina’s passivity is rather bothersome. Description lacks passion. Emotion though real enough is reduced to dull mundaneness. They seem a little lifeless. Are the author’s strings visible ?
Plot
The plot is jerky. In fact while certain incidents do strike a resonance with readers who have a English Lit /Delhi University background the going back and forth across two continents is clumsy. Sometimes interest flags… All major events appear to have equal emphasis. What is the climax ? What is the turning point? We keep waiting for something to happen which will cause a bang. But even the ending fizzles out like a damp squib.
Fantasy, Prophecy
The inadequacy culminates here. Do we feel it to be a vibrant book which hits you in the right spots and lifts you out of the specific to the universal ? … Not really. In fact we are reduced to plain ordinariness.
Pattern
Pretty straightforward and as said before, rather jerky especially in the beginning, with draggy bits. Of course the style is very matter of fact. Since I haven’t read any of the authors other book , I do not know whether it is her trade mark or it is intentional to this story. Some readers have found the graphic descriptions of sex and scenes like the college toilet rather crude and unnecessary. Perhaps the matter of factness is intentional then, to convey the utter depressing state of affairs.
Rhythm
None.
Final Verdict : A quick read, and for Delhiites there are many cameos one can identify with. One can empathise with the heroine most of the time, though her naivete appears somewhat unrealistic in these blasé times. The theme of personal growth is even mildly interesting. In the broader context however, the novel leaves one feeling let down and dissatisfied.