Sunday, August 15, 2010

The Shadow Lines

I just finished reading The Shadow Lines, another Amitav Ghosh book. Like most of his other books, this also meanders around the life of multiple characters, slowly building them layer by layer (so slowly that you don’t even realise how strongly you start identifying with them), and then ending on a dramatic and poignant climax, which would have never hit you that deep down within had the story not meandered along for that long. (Something akin to what I wrote about Munich in one of my previous blogs).

The Glass Palace was like that, this one’s only much much much better. I picked up this book from Crossword because it was ofcourse Ghosh’s book, but even more so because of the Khushwant Singh’s review, who wrote ‘This is how the language should be used.. This is how a novel should be written.’ He wasn’t too wrong at all. This is how a character should be built, this is how an emotion or idea should be communicated.

Amitav Ghosh is a brilliant author, probably India’s finest along with Rushdie, and this is undoubtedly his best work I have read. It is a non-linear story, in which the narrator fluidly travels back and forth in his memories, in time and space, from his childhood to the present, from India to London to Dhaka, from Thamma to Ila to ofcourse Tridib, and creates a web of intricate personalities and interconnected events, and leaves it to the reader to interpret it all. The beauty of the book is that it doesn’t tell you anything, but instead lets you interpret it yourself.

So what are these ‘shadow lines’. From what I interpret, they are those lines which we create between two people, two countries, two continents, two religions and what not. They are real and yet not so real after all; they exist and yet can vanish in a second if you flash light on them.

When I first heard John Lennon’s Imagine, I was flabbergasted.

‘Imagine there's no Heaven
It's easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people
Living for today
Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace.’

This cant be better put, I thought. But The Shadow Lines does that, and much more. While Lennon directly tells you to imagine this, Ghosh, as I said before, doesn’t tell you anything. Instead, in this lyrical work, he creates the entire cast in front of you, with the heaven, the hell, the people, the countries and the religions. He shows these shadow lines appearing and disappearing along the entire course of the narrative, and then literally makes you imagine all that Lennon talks about, without ever mentioning it directly himself, save for a couple of times.

Inception, as Leonardo di Caprio put it, is the most difficult to achieve, almost impossible. Ghosh manages to do that in this book. A must read, folks.

PS: There is a 3 page passage in the book, in which Tridib writes a letter to May beautifully describing an erotic scene, and tells her how he would like to meet her. That letter is a sort of mini Shadow Lines in itself, a masterpiece. It ends with ‘He wanted them to meet as the completest of strangers -- strangers-across-the-seas. He wanted them to meet far from their friends and relatives -- in a place without a past, without history, free, really free, two people coming together with the utter freedom of strangers.’ Wow!!!

PPS: Perhaps the book struck a deep chord with me because I anyway think a lot on the Kashmir issue nowadays, which is similar in nature. Who knows, if I read it dispassionately sometime later, I might have a lesser opinion, or an entirely different interpretation of it altogether!

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7 Comments:

At August 15, 2010 at 5:52 AM , Blogger smartshaun said...

Why don't you blog more about controversial topics, so that we may have a platform for lively debates? :P

 
At August 16, 2010 at 11:32 AM , Blogger Akshay said...

And you can then hijack my blog again eh!!.. Next topic probably will live upto your expectations :).. So keep checking the blog..

 
At August 31, 2010 at 10:15 AM , Blogger Tangled up in blue... said...

Akki, I agree, this is definitely one of Ghosh's best books and I always intended to write about it but now that I've read your commentary on it, I dont think I'll need to.

I also read The Calcutta Chromosome by Ghosh which is a slightly wacked out sci-fi/historical fiction book about malaria of all subjects..you shud read that one, too..I wonder what you'll think of it.

 
At September 1, 2010 at 9:07 AM , Blogger Akshay said...

Thats next!! Along with The Hungry Tide. Did you know of this store in Vashi which seels all these books at discounted rates all the year? Bought The Hungry Tide for just 200 bucks!! Reading The Millenium Series right now though. Where the hell are you btw? Not seen you in college since ages.
Btw, my Mom's started blogging!! Do check it out.
www.renubaheti.blogspot.com

 
At September 9, 2010 at 9:15 AM , Blogger Tangled up in blue... said...

So typical of you to describe it as "this store in Vashi which sells books at discounted rates" but you neglect to mention its name! :P whats it called and where in vashi is it?

I want to read the millenium series, too, I've heard great things about it..

and the flavour of the season, how ironic is this, but I had malaria!

 
At September 9, 2010 at 9:15 AM , Blogger Tangled up in blue... said...

ooh and definitely will check out your mom's blog and those books by Stieg Larsson post exams! :)

 
At December 7, 2010 at 11:47 AM , Blogger Akansha Agrawal said...

Oh thank god, there's another book lover :)

Was googling for the book, checking people's reactions over it, I just finished reading it. Will write a review in a day or two, after letting it sink in for a while, and hence I glossed over yours. No plagiarism intended, you see :)

Bookmarking you, though wonder why you don't write more often.

 

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