BY: Anuradha Roy
Late in this quietly mesmerizing novel, set in a Himalayan hill
town in the north of India, Anuradha Roy describes the crystalline beauty of
the peaks in winter, viewed long after the haze of the summer months and the
fog of the monsoon, held in secret for those who choose to brave the cold:
“After the last of the daylight is gone, at dusk, the peaks still glimmer in
the slow-growing darkness as if jagged pieces of the moon had dropped from sky
to earth.” In the mountains, one of Roy’s characters observes, “love must be
tested by adversity.”
It’s the inherent conflict in human attraction — the inescapable
fact that all people remain at heart unknown, even to those closest to them —
that forms the spine of the novel. In marrying a Christian, the narrator, Maya,
has become estranged from her wealthy family in Hyderabad. But after six happy
years together, her husband has died in a mountaineering accident. Rather than
return to her parents, she seeks refuge in Ranikhet, a town that looks toward
the mountains that so entranced her husband. Overcome with grief, she stows
away his backpack, recovered from the scene of the accident, and refuses to
inspect its contents. She can’t bear to know the details surrounding his death.
In Ranikhet, Maya settles into a routine: teaching at a
Christian school; spending time with her landlord, Diwan Sahib; and observing
the sometimes comic rhythms of the village and its army garrison. Roy manages
to capture both the absurd and the sinister in even minor characters, like a
corrupt local official who embarks on a beautification plan that includes
posting exhortatory signs around town. (One, meant to welcome trekkers, is
vandalized to read “Streaking route.”) His crusade, inspired by the Singaporean
Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, who embraced caning as a punishment, also includes
the persecution of a simple-minded but harmless herder.
Of course, a sedate world exists only to be shaken, and soon
enough the town is disturbed from all sides. An election brings issues of
religion to the fore, threatening to stir sectarian violence. Curious military
maneuvers prompt rumors of Chinese spies and fears of a border conflict with
Pakistan. Diwan Sahib’s nephew, Veer, a mountaineering guide, moves into the
elderly man’s villa, and Maya finds herself drawn to him, despite the bad
habits he encourages in his uncle and, more alarmingly, his tendency to
disappear without warning.
While there are scenes of tension and intrigue — a political
goon attacks a young girl, Veer’s work in the mountains starts to appear
suspicious — the novel’s mood remains elegiac rather than fraught, expressed
through small tragedies like the burning of a valuable manuscript or the death
of a beloved deer. Roy is particularly adept at mining the emotional
intricacies of the relationship between Maya and Diwan Sahib, which also serves
to symbolize India’s uneasy passage from tradition to modernity.
The novel’s one weakness is its culminating revelation (and its
consequences), which feels strangely insignificant, as if Roy couldn’t bring
herself to commit to the more outrageous implications she has set in motion.
“If you told a stranger that there are actually big snow peaks where that sky
is,” a character notes of a day when the Himalayas are shrouded in clouds,
“would he believe you? . . . But you and I know the peaks are there. We are
surrounded by things we don’t know and can’t understand.” Perhaps Roy prefers
to keep the heights of her story, like those mountaintops, shrouded in mystery.
Background
of an author:
Anuradha
Roy- Since publishing her first novel, An Atlas of Impossible Longing, Anuradha
Roy has developed into one of the most exciting new
voices of South Asian literature. Published to critical acclaim, her first
novel was published in thirteen different languages. Her second novel, The Folded Earth won
the Economist Crossword Book Award 2011 and achieved similar success to her
debut. Her latest novel, Sleeping on Jupiter was longlisted
for the 2015 Man Booker Prize and was crowned the winner of the 2015 DSC Prize
for South Asian Literature. As well as being an author, Roy runs an academic
publishing company in India with her husband called Permanent Black, which they
started together in 2000.
Appreciation of the story:
In this
story they prove if how they love each other although their families disapprove
their relationship but still they are still together but how sad for Maya that
Micheal die for an incident. It’s hard to accept that your love one is not
coming back to you.
I can’t
relate this story to my life although I experience already that having a love
life but at the end , our relationship to each other won’t take too long
because there are a lot of things that happen, but it hurts so much to see your
love one having another girl then they are sweet to each other. Actually I’d
having my love life that my parents won’t know that’s why I’m scared to say to
them that I have already a love life but months have pass I decided to stop and
we break up. I surrender my feelings to him although it’s hard for me to do it
but I need.
TANGINANG PLAGIARIZED ITO
TumugonBurahinhahahhahahaha
TumugonBurahinHAHAHAHHA PPUTANGIAN MO
TumugonBurahinhaha
TumugonBurahin