Sign In / Register
Make This My Home Page | Feedback |RSS
You are here: IE »   Story

And the Booker goes to Kiran Desai for a novel about the ‘anxiety of being a foreigner’

  • Print
  • Mail This Article
  • Comments
  • Add to favorites
  • Personal Loan

    A magnificent novel of human breadth and wisdom. That was how the judges described the novel that won this year’s Man Booker Prize for 2006: Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss.

    In the country of her birth, Kiran Desai’s name had been fluttering in the expectant air ever since she had made it to the Booker shortlist. Will she, won’t she... As it happened, she did. Call it a hullabaloo in the literary orchard, or the inheritance of gain, but the Man Booker has an ineffable charm about it. It brings the usual salutations, of course, a 50,000-pound cheque and guaranteed increase in sales. And how Kiran Desai, at 35, is the youngest female writer to win the Man Booker; how she met the requirement of providing “a distinctive, original voice and audacious imagination” to the world of modern literature, and so on and so forth.

    But the new winner of the Man Booker is also a heartening reminder that an India-on-the-10-percent-growth track is still capable of nudging the imagination of its children, resident and non.

    Ads by Google

    The Inheritance of Loss may have taken a big bite out of Big Apple, with the innumerable worlds residing in its basements — “above the restaurant was French, but below in the kitchen it was Mexican and Indian” — but India resides at its centre. Funny, isn’t it, how the three books from the subcontinent that went on to win the Commonwealth’s highest literary award together seem to relate a continuing story” First, there was Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children — winner of the 1981 Booker — its chutneyfied prose riding on a sea of stories from a nation born at the midnight hour. Then came Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things (Booker, 1997) with its exploration of the cracks and rifts, of caste and of class, that the country inherited and carried uneasily within it. Now, in 2006, we have in Kiran Desai’s The Inheritance of Loss a globalised India, where past and future live in uneasy juxtaposition, where lives are being pulled and pushed into varied corners, in a world where migration is the iron law of life. A novel, which the author herself said, concerns with “the enormous anxiety of being a foreigner.”

    ... contd.

    Next12
    Comments
    Post comment

    Be the first to comment.

    Post a Comment
    Name:
    Email:
    Title:
    Maximum characters allowed     
    Comment:
    TERMS OF USE:
    The views, opinions and comments posted are your, and are not endorsed by this website. You shall be solely responsible for the comment posted here. The website reserves the right to delete, reject, or otherwise remove any views, opinions and comments posted or part thereof. You shall ensure that the comment is not inflammatory, abusive, derogatory, defamatory &/or obscene, or contain pornographic matter and/or does not constitute hate mail, or violate privacy of any person (s) or breach confidentiality or otherwise is illegal, immoral or contrary to public policy. Nor should it contain anything infringing copyright &/or intellectual property rights of any person(s).
    I agree to the terms of use.