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Kishwar
Ahluwalia rediscovers
the quiet life in Manoj Das’s varied short stories.
Selected Fiction
By Manoj Das
Penguin India
Price: Rs 250
It is
a strange, yet significant coincidence, so soon after R.K.
Narayan’s death to review a book about life in the slow lanes
of small towns. Especially because though this book is written
by someone else, he has also done a great job. This collection
is unpretentious and simple, enshrining a healthy dose of
straightforward storytelling. Frankly, this is welcome relief
because helpless readers are sick of being injured and assaulted
by Magical Realism on the one hand, and Meaningful Symbolism
on the other. Not to speak of the endless hit-parade of so-called
self-help books, spiritual tomes and — ho hum! — socio-political
satires.
The funny
thing is, you don’t know how much you have missed down-to-earth
fiction which gently focuses on human foibles, almost with
an anthropological zeal. Manoj Das not only creates a rural,
semi-urban environment effortlessly, he also provides an authentic
voice which deeply reflects the vernacular.
Perhaps
a reason why we find such little expression of small town
life (amongst Indian writers in the English language) could
be the natural torpor of this setting. The author has to whip
up a curious menagerie of characters who more than make up
for the missing action. (Again, the Malgudi chronicles are
a case in point.) This requires unusual ingenuity — especially
when, as it is for Das, the main medium is the short story.
However,
it is reassuring that Manoj Das has won just about every award
in the country which already means that (apart from me) there
are many other people who have read and enjoyed his genius.
Selected
Fiction combines 28 short stories and a novella which move
us from the physical to the metaphysical with sinuous ease.
So while Das entertains you with all sorts of otherworldly
beings, including ghosts and fairies, he also assembles with
depth, substance and humour very, very ordinary, but very
unforgettable people. The best descriptions are of the aged
— who demonstrate a zest for life and a masterful determination
in dealing with their pasts. For instance, the elderly Miss
Roopwati in ‘‘The Misty Hair’’ opts for political survival
by revealing a youthful indiscretion, and Bhanu Singh in ‘‘The
Naked’’ manages successfully his internal turmoil over a nudist
delegation encounter.
The short
stories are very skillful, indeed — for instance, ‘‘Prithviraj’s
Horse’’ or (my favourite) ‘‘Bhola Grandpa and the Tiger’’.
Here, the central characters are so finely etched that they
leap out of the pages and take up permanent residence in your
mind, even though you may never find Parvatipuri where the
schoolteacher, Mukund (‘‘Prithviraj’s Horse’’), lives.
Unfortunately,
the novella falls short of expectations. In this you wait
with dread for something to happen, as it meanders on, but
nothing ever does. The Tiger at Twilight promises more than
it delivers. Another weak spot in the book is that while names
and places are different, some of the characters invented
by Das do overlap. For instance, Miss Moberly, Miss Roopwati
and Gauri appear to be extensions of the same persona. Similarly
many of the male characters give you an overwhelming sense
of deja vu. But this may be due to the choice of stories,
as perhaps a wider variety of Das’s writing needed to have
been showcased.
However,
we can only suggest this for the next collection. For the
time being, this luminous re-discovery of the quiet life will
do quite nicely, thank you.
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