Tuesday, August 17, 2021

David Copperfield by Charles Dickens – A book review



Regardless of it being acknowledged or not, one has a favourite child, if you have borne children of course. Charles Dickens mentions in the introduction that of all the books and characters he’s written about, David Copperfield was the closest to his heart. And one can only fully comprehend why after having read this mammoth of a book and smiling with pleasure while reading the last few pages offering a final account of the multitude of characters that form David Copperfield and his eventful journey.

Our education system often introduces ‘Morals and Ethics’ as a subject, separately, with a few case studies thrown our way every now and then, to render an elaboration or explanation. I personally believe, our human culture would benefit more from a book like this were it to be a part of the curriculum, if not entirely it.

Most of Dickens’ stories are the rags to riches kind, and David Copperfield is no exception.  It is in the sustenance of a humility, strongly clasped to, and the simplicity they hold on to with a giant’s unyielding embrace, no matter how puny their exteriors, that most characters in this story make believable the arduous journey and explorations of their lives, in turn stimulating the reader. The story is replete with patience, firmness, goodness, acceptance, afflictions, endurance and many more such attributes closely associated to life.

Oh, how I would have loved to have an eccentric aunt like Betsy Trotwood, a coconut in human form, benefitting equally from her austerity as much from her softness. And a friend like the less privileged Thomas Traddles, a paragon of simplicity, a connoisseur of the simple pleasures of life, a retainer and caretaker of mirth arising out of them. And what joy would it be to have an elderly companion like Mr. Pegotty, a rustic venerable creature who has a heart bigger than the ocean he rides on. And Agnes! To think of her as a goddess could be acknowledged as a rightful thought, but to treat her as one would only be imprecise; it would rob humanity of the embodiment of what is truly human. Many more, many more. These fine characters choose or desire to choose the right kind of privileges that life offers and they aren’t money, status, property or vanity; it’s more of finding permanence in the temporary. And the story isn’t lacking in unscrupulous figures and elements, in case you were wondering.

I say I would have loved to have the people in David Copperfield’s life, but then, do I deserve them? We all have had or come across our Betsy Trotwoods, Traddles, Agneses and Pegottys in one form or the other but did we recognize them, hang on to them, or let them vanish? That has defined our lives and will continue to do so. Though, I claim that this story has highly influenced me, what I do with it or am able to do with it is all that matters.

‘What you seek is seeking you’ said Rumi. David and Agnes’s story and relationship is a realization of this quote; things, feelings and people we yearn for lie right before our eyes and yet we travel far and further seeking them, inadvertently overlooking.

Every page of David Copperfield’s struggle to find himself and his destiny is worth it; I wouldn’t raise an alarm for it being superfluous if hundred more pages were added relevant to the sublimity of the story. Every word is a lyrical fit in the entertaining Dickenson language, if I may call it so, a defunct linguistic glory that twists and turns in its dialogue of words for the right meaning and effect. The era of respect and respectful language has diminished over the years and has changed form drastically and what we are left with now is a boorish platter of expressions in most current day literature. That’s why Charles Dickens and his contemporaries are important; the classics are essential; their task is to remind us of what we were and (being optimistic) of what we could be.

The only discontent I felt was in the neglect of Ham. Had David Copperfield or Charles Dickens been alive, I would have been tempted to ask a few questions about him. Marked by simplicity, loyalty and care, his character, even when wronged, receives nothing more than mere sympathy. Even in his death, Dickens through David’s account, writes little of him and more of the despicable flamboyant Steerforth, whose perished body lies beside Ham’s. I guess it is Dickens’ way of portraying an unfair life with even the virtuous of characters giving in to the formidable unfairness of it? We ultimately return to the chess box, but what we do before that defines us.

A must read for anyone who likes a good story, a tale well narrated. Highly engaging and influencing. Highly recommended.

My rating: 10/10

Image copyrights:

Book cover - © https://www.amazon.in/Copperfield-Vintage-Classics-Charles-Dickens/dp/0099511460

Charles Dickens - © https://www.britannica.com/biography/Charles-Dickens-British-novelist

Thursday, August 12, 2021

The Lighthouse by Alison Moore – A book review


Language Teachers often make their learners read a text and ask them to summarise it or provide a gist; the reading sub-skill is called ‘Reading for gist’. The Lighthouse does exactly the opposite, if you ask me. The epigraph more or less provides the gist and then Alison Moore expands it to create her story.

She became a tall lighthouse sending out kindly beams which some took for welcome instead of  warnings against the rocks.

- Muriel Spark, ‘The Curtain Blown by the Breeze’ - Epigraph

Alison Moore’s story, long-listed for the Man Booker, is an allegorical tale about Futh, a middle-aged man recently separated from his infidel wife Angela. Futh thinks a walking holiday will help and hence he travels to Germany from the U.K. He’s been on a walking trip once as a child, with his father.  The infidelity of his wife and her deserting him are not the only painful thoughts running on his mind. He hasn’t had the best of childhoods and has seen duplicity and adultery in abundance as a child. All the thoughts of his mother leaving his father and him, of the adulteries of his father, of Gloria – the lady neighbor, of Kenny – the only friend he talks about and of Angela of course – a girl he always looked up to and looked out for, only to be ignored, and is now his wife and soon will cease to be. Apart from the emptiness, he always carries with him the silver lighthouse, a perfume bottle, which wasn’t supposed to be his.

I remember what my father had once said when I was a child and a moth entered through our window and was desperately buzzing against the tube-light. I had wanted to drive it away, but my father said “Leave it alone; it’s come to die.” And I did find it lying dead on the floor the next day. I have encountered many moths and other insects since then, devoted and obsessed with the light, being wasted to the same fate, either eaten by the slimy tongue of a predator or restlessly tiring themselves to death. The moths, and other such nocturnal insects, it is said, seek to travel by the shining light of the moon, by a method called transverse orientation (just like humans keep the North Star in a certain position to know where they are). And the electric illumination confuses them. Stupid insects. Just like stupid humans – we only think we are intelligent until proven wrong by an upper hand. We seek lighthouses to save us; we travel to our end!

And Ester is the other character Alison Moore freely writes about. She’s the owner’s wife, of a hotel that Futh has booked as part of his travel holiday. Another moth that has chosen the light-bulb instead of the moon. Coincidences and misfortunes then ensue and you see Futh, and sometimes Ester, inadvertently being enticed by the shining light of the allegorical lighthouse, fluttering desperately against the light without being aware of any dangers lurking.

Alison Moore’s symbolic writing renders an uncanny feel to her story. Like the moths and lighthouse, Ester’s Venus Flytraps too allude to a mystery of alluring, capture and doom. I liked this simple novella; the language is simple but the meaning is full of allusions, hinting at, building implicitly layer upon layer of a suspense of misfortune that you earlier ignored or overlooked.  

So, does Futh ultimately receive a welcome or does he, not realizing, ignore the warnings against the rocks? It is ultimately Futh’s silver lighthouse that substantiates the epigraph – finally literally.

Next time I see a moth, I know what I'll call it.

My rating: 4/5

Image Copyrights:

Book cover - © https://canongate.co.uk/books/2041-the-lighthouse/

Alison Moore - © https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/04/books/review/alison-moore-the-lighthouse.html

Monday, June 7, 2021

Death by Water by Kenzaburo Oé – A book review

Kogito Choko is a renowned Japanese author (like Kenzaburo Oé) and most of his books have been turned into plays by Masao Anai, a theatre virtuoso.  Choko has been longing to write a novel about his long dead father but not before accessing a red leather trunk which his father had carried along to his mysterious and controversial death by drowning. He has a recurrent dream from witnessing the scene when his father ventured in the middle of a storm on a small boat to his death. Kogito’s imaginary doppelganger Kogii who no-one else can see was on the boat too. This shadowy Kogii, who had been his only real playmate during his growing up years departs mysteriously too.  Kogito feels trapped in the blurring lines between reality and dreams.

The novel’s main theme revolves around these lines from T.S.Eliot’s poem ‘The Wasteland: IV – Death by Water’ which feature in the novel repeatedly.

‘A current under sea
Picked his bones in whispers. As he rose and fell
He passed the stages of his age and youth
Entering the whirlpool.’

Kogito doesn’t get access to this elusive trunk for about three decades or more until his mother dies and when he does lay his hands on it, to his dismay, he finds that most of the materials he had supposed could give him more details of his father have been destroyed by his mother.

Masao Anai and his theatre cadre, for his next play, are heavily depending on Kogito Choko writing the much awaited ‘Drowning Novel’ which is supposed to be an apt summation for Choko’s earlier novels and characters. However, to everyone’s dismay, Choko abandons the idea after the disappointing revelation of the contents of the red leather trunk. And then the story hops from one hackneyed subject to another such as the troubled relationship with his brain-damaged grown-up composer son Akari (Oé has a developmentally disabled son named Hikari who’s a composer too), the Occupation war, the end of an emperor’s era, the plight of farmers in the countryside, references to the spirit world, and finally meandering to other serious social issues like rape and abortion.  


There are many ways to kill a person. You can spend a bullet and shoot him in different parts of his body, strangle him, stab him a few times, even choke him under water. And then you can also use a harmless looking weapon and batter someone to death, beat him to a pulp and keep doing so even after the soul has left him. Kenzaburo Oé seems to strongly approve of the latter.

Imagine this:

Me telling you – I bought khaki coloured shorts today.

My brother telling you – Do you know he bought khaki coloured shorts today.

My mother telling my father – He bought khaki coloured shorts today. They look good.

My father telling me – You bought khaki coloured shorts today from that shop.

Neil Armstrong telling Edwin Aldrin – That man bought khaki shorts today. Amazing, isn’t it.

WHO telling the world, an earthworm informing a centipede, a spider whispering to a fly – SOMEONE BOUGHT KHAKI SHORTS TODAY.

Did you not wince every time you heard about my khaki shorts after the first mention? I did too – badly, every time I heard about the red leather trunk and the ‘drowning novel’, then at the hackneyed mention of an experimental yet irritating (I really thought so) ‘tossing the dogs’ concept of drama, and then reading/listening to ten different people telling each other how badly Choko had behaved with his son Akari, and then about Meisuke’s mother and the insurrection! Oh, and did I forget to mention witnessing Choko’s father on the night of the storm aboard a small boat with the red leather trunk and his doppelganger Kogii. It’s like Jackie Chan teaching ‘The Karate Kid’ each move a zillion times so it is ingrained in the brain and is sort of automated when it is to be executed in real life. Oé treats each theme in a similar fashion; particularly the drowning of his father is a tiring leitmotif in the novel. The author should have known that it is a story we are reading and not an art we’re trying to master; the reader must have the freedom to remember or forget, and not be battered by hackneyed descriptions of the same subject.

I don’t normally quit a book midway, but there were times I almost shouted out ‘One more mention of the red leather trunk and I’m going to take a devilish pleasure in painting each page red; one more time someone describes the scene of his father’s death and I’m going to tear out each page and sink it into the bucket.’ Death by words, by banality!

Nonetheless, a few things from the novel stood out strongly for me and I realize they are to do with culture. Firstly, I felt the Japanese culture’s acceptance of death is sublime. In a way, it seems they ready themselves for it, which to me is an extremely brave thing. Throughout the book, different characters including his wife, sister and daughter talk openly and elaborately about Kogito’s death in his presence and he listens calmly, a death that isn’t known when it’ll come. All throughout the book, family members and other characters blame Kogito Choko for not preparing or readying Akari, his son for Akari’s death when it comes. They are quite comfortable, rather happy having morbid discussions. In contrast, in the Indian culture, from where I belong, people don’t like talking about it; they generally fear death and inadvertently fight for life till the last gasp. I’m sure in both and most cultures, life is valued as much. And the acceptance of suicides is also daunting. Yes, there’s not much you can do but accept it eventually but the peaceful acceptance and the glorification of it made me uncomfortable.

The other prominent feature I experienced was the act of being straightforward; it’s exaggerated to a new dimension. Even if one has committed a stupid act, one wouldn’t be comfortable or stolidly be a mute audience when reminded repeatedly of the unpleasant behavior. In most cultures, it would come across as rude. Tolerance and patience probably derive their meanings from the phlegmatic characters of this book and this richness is definitely a lesson to be learnt if one can and is willing to.

Kogito Choko in one of the chapters, when talking to Unaiko, the new theatre virtuoso, says why he doesn’t write fantasy – probably because he’s not capable to do so; so he relies on imagination which has some basis in reality. Kenzaburo Oé takes a lot from his real life and refers freely to his previous novels.

T.S. Eliot’s lines are echoed in the few lines written by Kogito’s mother and completed by Kogito:

“You didn’t get Kogii ready to go up into the forest
And like the river current, you won’t return home
In Tokyo during the dry season
I’m remembering everything backward
From old age to earliest childhood.”

And all characters from then on find comfort in repeating these lines and stating the same meaning to each other like a chant. Probably, through repetition, they keep things alive in their minds and maybe strive to find new and different meanings.

It would have been a much nicer story had the author been harshly concise with it.

My rating: 4/10

Image copyrights

Kenzaburo Oe - © https://groveatlantic.com/author/kenzaburo-oe/

Book cover - © https://www.amazon.in/Death-Water-Kenzaburo-Oe/dp/0857895486

Thursday, May 13, 2021

Tomorrow by Graham Swift – A book review

Tomorrow is going to be a big day for Paula and her family, especially for her husband and her teenager twins. A revelation is going to be made; it could have a devastating consequence or pass off as an acceptance, not altering the togetherness they share.

Paula lies awake the night before the revelation, reminiscing about her entire life, the choices she made, the choices they made as a couple, the memories of the arrival and growing up of their children. She is mentally readying herself for the questions that are likely to surface tomorrow. A secret is going to be revealed.

Reading the initial pages, I felt happy about the book and the writing. I liked the suspense Graham Swift had created for the reader; I liked the way each chapter ended in an exclamatory manner. I like ramblings, the way writers like Swift and many others are able to articulate the mental agony and jubilation that goes on inside the heads of a few. However, when Paula’s adventures and musings had just started to amuse me, I felt she just kept rambling about the same things again and again. Her hackneyed musings felt like a senile old person’s ranting, which she isn’t; which I’d hoped Swift wasn’t. Probably, that was Swift’s precise motive to give it a natural touch but honestly, after a certain point, Paula’s memories came across to me as mere fillers and there wasn’t much to hold on to.

Often I ended up saying ‘You’ve mentioned that before.’ ‘Get on with it lady.’ ‘What’s the big thing about it?’

Definitely not the worst of books but surely not the best of Swift either. I laughed when I read a few reviews after completing the book; some even mentioned they have a new ‘Quit’ shelf after they read this one. Well, I wouldn’t dismiss it as that; a good attempt I’d say. Nonetheless, I couldn’t sustain my interest for Paula’ ramblings for long; I ended up not feeling much or strongly for her. And what I also felt missing was the father’s point of view, just like he’s missing on the front cover of the book and is seen alone on the back cover although the picture is one of togetherness.

MY RATING: 5/10

Image copyrights

Book cover - 

©https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/277532.Tomorrow

Graham Swift © https://www.theguardian.com/books/2020/may/18/here-we-are-review-breathtaking-storytelling-from-graham-swift


Tuesday, April 27, 2021

Warlight by Michael Ondaatje – A book review



The human mind is the most creative tool for deception.

It seeks peace; it creates wars.

And you can’t escape it. Some comment, some fight, some flee. A few have names; a headline, a picture, a medal hanging on the wall or tucked beneath neatly folded clothes. Others are silhouettes, the ghosts of war, not to be identified. They are the breeze and the wind, only their actions cause a rustle marking their existence.

‘Warlight’ sees Nathaniel pursue the identity of his parents, particularly his mother as they lie and abandon them in the hands of curious caretakers. Michael Ondaatje’s story places each foot on two taught ropes; one - a secret loyalty to one’s country in wartime, and the other - a presence for one’s family. The distance only widens and the characters make a choice.

But the choice they make, inevitably and apparently isn’t only for them. They risk and give in to being misunderstood and even hated by the ones they belong to. Forgoing all expectations of a normal life, as they carry on their clandestine operations, the line between right and wrong is blurred in the attempt to follow orders. Few children will understand and respect the almost impenetrable fortress built around them for their safety, if their parents themselves are not in it with them; often a convincing look or nod or the warmth of a hand held in assurance is safety enough for a child. Or just being there.  

The outcome is a failed distorted childhood, robbing Nathaniel and his sister of the ability to trust, to value as they live around personalities that walk in and out of their lives, characters that are flesh and blood yet about whom they know very little and have little inclination to find about. When everything seems to be a farce, one tends to give up trying to understand not just the bigger picture but the presence and absence of the distinctive roles others tend to play in their small lives. Living in the moment then becomes the truth and aimlessly is the direction it takes.

I wonder if it was also Ondaatje’s scheme to subtly question the depth of loyalty against individualism or was it just me. Is it the strong craving in a few for adventure, an endeavor to find purpose in chaos, a fetish for self-flagellation in reclusion,  that weighs more and disguises itself in the name of patriotism. Will they ever be able to cope with what is termed the la la land of a normal life when they get one? And does it make any difference at all if the end justifies the means? There are no ends really, only justifications and they don’t really mean anything; they are forgiven or forgotten, and in most cases not.

I simply loved the second part of the book where Rose (for those who aren’t aware a Viola exists), Nathaniel’s mother expresses herself and lets us in on her journey, thoughts and feelings. Poetry, sheer poetry in the lines of Ondaatje depicting a sacrificial tenderness and intimacy between Rose and her distanced lover, The Gatherer - Marsh Felon who has selfishly chosen her for living a dual life.

Is the memory of that one kiss, that particular touch, the yearning for more, the reassuring warmth of that one night enough to live a lifetime? It is, for some. Memories. Acceptance.

Michael Ondaatje ushers us effortlessly in a dimmed warlight to discover secrecy, pain, longing, strength and devotion and you feel more than see in the dark labyrinths of his words. How much can one stoically accept and endure?

Nathaniel: “What did you do that was so terrible?” 

Rose: “My sins are various.”

My rating – 8/10








Image courtesy:

Book cover - ©https://readingproject.neocities.org/BookReviews/Warlight_MichaelOndaatje.html

Michael Ondaatje - © https://manoflabook.com/wp/fun-facts-friday-michael-ondaatje/

Monday, March 22, 2021

Tess of the d’Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy – A book review


I want to read the book all over again. And again. And again. But somehow I know more likely than not, I never will.

Oh what a tragic story; so beautifully told.

Tess, O dear Tess, only if I had found you, discovered you before anyone else did! If only I could be the one your beautiful eyes sought, only if I could be the breeze you enjoyed the intimacy of, only if I was the reason not for your misery but for your miserable loving heart, only if I could live up to the purity of your soul… only if … only if.

This is probably the only story that had me empathizing with the female character fully. I’ve read many, attempted my best to understand the emotions and acts, probably even understood some, but the acceptance of them, I guess has been beyond my intellect. I’ve never really liked the word ‘empathy’ though; it sounds so farcical. I can only imagine but not actually feel Tess’s pain and agony even if I want to; how can I? No-one could have lived Tess’s life, her sacrifices in love but her. So strong in character yet so weak and vulnerable in love.

Tess’s devastating path is paved all the way, very cunningly, by Fate.  Manipulated by Alec d’Urberville, a player, her life changes for the worse as she unwillingly graduates to be a woman from an innocent teenager, without chancing upon and enjoying the imperfection of ladyship. But then, I hold her imbecile and selfish parents more responsible than Alec for her plight; one cannot send Hansel and Gretel out into the forest without the fear of being eaten up, no matter how optimistic and needy they be. Poverty, shame and self-respect guide her on to the path of a dairy in another town and as a dairymaid. Fate brings her to encounter Angel Clare, a rebel with a cause, a man of meaning and virtues, of character and strength, knowledge and passion, a gentleman; a vessel of innocence commensurate with that that of Tess’s.

And they fall in love, naturally like the wind and clouds, like the night and stars. Try as much as she can, Tess fails to reveal her past to Angel and when she does, on the night of their union; the revelation is as much a disaster as Fate. Angel, clouded by his morals and the stringent path of his thoughts and righteousness, can’t place her as the one he fell in love with. He abandons her – a punishment as severe to him as to her. What transpires later is more tragic and as Fate, yet again leaves its marks cutting through the flesh, pricking the soul; one wonders if pain is innate in some; inseparable, necessary, like the torso, the brain, the heart and other organs one is born with. What time heals, time brings back again and it’s futile to ask or reason out the mockery.

Allow me a little exaggeration as I have shouted out a number of times reading those paragraphs of mental turmoil, separation and despair, pleading with Angel to reconsider, not abandon her, not despise her, trying to convince him that Tess is pure, as pure as his thoughts. But Angel Clare isn’t Chaucer’s Troilus, another soul so full of love, so pure in love, an apt match. But who really knows, perhaps Troilus would’ve reacted just as Angel did; alas we are guarded, controlled and manipulated by the fortuities of providence.

We fall in love. We do. Fall.

Tess fell. Angel fell. And the rise is never devoid of sacrifice. And in Tess’s case, murder!

There’s innocence in the story, an innocence to be cherished in its plainness. Not just the characters, but the description of the countryside, the scenery, the expanses of the fields, the rivers and pathways, the horse-carts transport you to an era devoid of technology (how much I’ve hated to use this word here), to a life of minimalism and free of the cacophony of hurriedness.

Throughout the story, I visualized a known face to Tess’s, I morphed it to hers. I sought comfort snuggling myself in the elfin cave on her face shaped with every smile. I took her hand and walked the countryside. But I had to remind myself that it’s a story; Tess isn’t a face, a body. I wonder if a Tess ever existed. Does she? Do you Tess? I hope you do.

 I have put Thomas Hardy on a pedestal; this book has been my introduction to him and I only want to get acquainted more. The writing is so clean, devoid of pompousness, with so much respect to the characters and the reader. There’s something about the classics; there’s something about Charles Dickens, D.H.Lawrence, Thomas Hardy; there’s honesty and innocence.

My rating – 10/10

Images copyrights:

Book cover - © https://oldbookdepot.in/product/tess-of-the-durbervilles-wordworth-classics-2-2/

Thomas Hardy - © https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poets/thomas-hardy

Tuesday, February 2, 2021

Sacred Games by Vikram Chandra – A book review

 

947 pages in small print. 947 pages about the rise and fall of a ruthless gangster and the lives revolving around him.

Perceptions matter and perceptions differ. So I’ll speak for myself and the multitude like me in Mumbai who have if not directly encountered gangsters, politicians and the film industry, have definitely not been free of or able to escape their tangle of power, ruthlessness and glamour. How can one, if it’s in one’s face every day; when one has news reporters enthusiastically bleeding their ears and eyes with accounts of the unsafe world one lives in, ruled by these handful despots yielding power.

Ganesh Gaitonde is one such despot and the story is about him and his addiction to power. How I wish every such horrendous creature was nipped in the bud, eliminated, annihilated when they committed their first monstrosity. But this isn’t our world though like imbeciles we believe so; we are only acting our parts in someone else’s play. And like you and me, every Ganesh Gaitonde is a part of this play whether we prefer him or not.

There’s a tree called Manchineel found in the mangroves of South Florida, the Caribbean, Central America and northern South America. Resembling a small green crabapple about 1 to 2 inches wide, its sweet-smelling fruits can cause hours of agony – and potentially death – with a single bite. (source: Why Manchineel Might Be Earth's Most Dangerous Tree (treehugger.com)) Nevertheless, it exists, grows. Nature nurtures it with the needed sunlight, water and conditions to survive, just like for any other tree but unlike others, it dubiously produces poison and that’s what it has to offer. Our gangster is nurtured by the police, politicians and the crowd that seeks refuge and money and willingly enslave themselves to this gory power and in return he spits venom.

The story takes you through the meandering filthy lanes of the underworld. If you have watched enough gangster movies and witnessed contrivance and connivance of these manipulative soulless hyenas of control and dominance over the years, Vikram Chandra’s story then becomes just a rendering of facts beaded together by instances of treachery, immorality, fanaticism and more gruesome tales of betrayal; a colourful script for another movie reeking of inhumanity. The indubitable power of money securing ammunition, control, flesh, friendship, religion litters across the pages. There’s a tacit agreement to these acts, in fact an attempt to justify as well. This reminds me of probably one of the most popular dialogues of yesteryear films, ‘Koi apni maa ke pet se bura paida nahi hota, ye duniya use bura banati hai’ (no-one is born a bad person in the mother’s womb; the world turns them into a bad person). And I go ‘Yes, yes, I can only imagine what a world it'd be had every oppressed person thought this way and turned out to be like this.’

So the mentioned men of law whether it be our hero Sartaj Singh, or Katekar, Parulkar or Kamble, work hard but also take bribes, take pride in their infidelity, use their influence to bend and break the law, team up with gangsters, kill for them, kill them, are shamelessly epitomes of lawlessness but are supposedly justified; we are to feel sorry for them. Women like Jojo, Zoya or Kamala Pandey and many others who not reluctantly but willingly contrive for their dreams of a better life, sell themselves for fun, popularity and power are meant to be justified; we are supposed to feel for them as well. A self obsessed megalomaniac like Ganesh Gaitonde who kills at will, offers his own men who trust and idolize him as bait, ravages women just because he can, feeds on virgins for strength, manipulates and contrives to the lowest possible levels is glorified. But there’s always an eagle lurking for a snake. So, there’s a guru that Mr.Gaitonde believes in, trusts and this guru has a plan for mankind and the plan isn’t particularly conducive to your or my safety, happiness and well-being. I guess we need less gurus and more heroes like Batman to save the world; who have no jurisdiction but are truly good.

Have you read ‘Inferno’ by Dan Brown? Just asking.

Have you read ‘Shantaram’ by Gregory David Roberts? Just asking again.

I wouldn’t say I disliked the book but too much of prose (minus any poetry) probably got to me. Just another gangster movie story I'd say heavily influenced by Bollywood.

Just like the Glocks and AK47s mentioned, the bulk of the book could kill one if it were to fall from a shelf above. 947 pages done with. And what do I feel now? Well, I’m only happy to move on to reading another book; I’d rather go for Dickens or Iris Murdoch this time.

My rating: 5 out of 10

Images copyright

Book cover - ©Buy Sacred Games Book Online at Low Prices in India | Sacred Games Reviews & Ratings - Amazon.in

Author - ©Jabberwock: A conversation with Vikram Chandra (jaiarjun.blogspot.com)