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Authors' Choice
Renowned
writers William Dalrymple, Tehmima Anam, Kamila Shamsie and Ruchir
Joshi share their favourite books of 2007 with Newsline readers.
By
Kamila Shamsie
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| William Dalrymple
Author of The Last Mughal: The Fall of a Dynasty, Delhi,
1857
"The
book that impressed me most was Alex Von Tunzlemann's Indian
Summer - the best overview I have ever read on Independence
and Partition, and pretty close to a flat out masterpiece,
in my humble opinion. It is also by a long way the most amusing,
and balanced, account of the Mountbattens and their strange
ménage á trois with Nehru.
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Very
different and almost as good was Kathryn Tidrick's iconoclastic
Gandhi: A Political and Spiritual Life, in which Tidrick locates
the roots of Gandhi's thought in the lunatic spiritualist fringe
of late Victorian England among the occultists, high fibreists,
mediums and the ectoplasm-seekers who flourished in late 19th century
London. It is almost too good to be true that the huge, pompous
Curzonian edifice of the Raj was undermined by ideas emanating from
such wonderfully dotty sources, yet Tidrick makes her case very
persuasively.
One
book which did not get the attention it deserved was Linda Colley's
wonderful The Ordeal of Elizabeth Marsh. This stunningly revisionist
study of Britain's imperial vulnerability is seen through the lens
of one woman's strange odyssey through the surprisingly globalised
world of the 18th century. It follows its heroine's journey from
Jamaica to Bengal via Portsmouth, Minorca and a period of captivity
in Morocco. It is beautifully written, superbly well researched
and reads a little like the adventures of a non-fiction Becky Sharpe.
In
fiction, I loved Mohsin Hamid's Reluctant Fundamentalist, a beautifully
controlled, gripping and superbly well-written look at the process
of radicalisation. I was also bowled over by a remarkable new translation
of what was once the most popular oral epic of the Indo-Islamic
world. The Adventures of Hamza is the Iliad and Odyssey of mediaeval
Persia world: a rollicking, magic-filled heroic saga, full of myth
and imagination. It was originally composed in Iraq around the 9th
century, but it was in India that the epic took on a life of its
own, growing to an unprecedented size and absorbing endless Indian
myths and legends. Remarkably, this is the first time the epic has
been translated into English and is as close as is now possible
to the world of the Mughal campfire, those night gatherings of soldiers,
Sufis, musicians and camp-followers that one sees in Mughal miniatures:
a storyteller beginning his tale in a clearing of a forest as the
embers of the blaze glow red and the eager fire-lit faces crowd
around."
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| Ruchir Joshi
Author of The Last Jet Engine Laugh
"My
reading has been very haphazard this year and, in terms of books,
thinner than normal because I'm at a critical stage of trying to
produce one myself. I read Christopher Bayly and Tim Harper's Forgotten
Armies, partly because it's directly related to the time and subject
of the novel I am working on at the moment, and partly because I'm
a low-level Second World War nerd (meaning it's a book I would have
picked up anyway).
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The
book takes the crescent from Calcutta to Singapore and looks at
the major events that scarred the region from the late '30s to the
end of the Second World War. The forgotten armies of this book include
not just the British Indian Army and the Japanese forces arrayed
against it, but also the several irregular forces thrown up in Burma,
Malaysia and Indonesia by the tsunami of popular disenchantment
with the Empire that was coming to a head by the late '30s. The
first few pages confirmed for me that this was not one of those
revanchist, clever white boys' apologies for the Raj, after which,
I was gripped.
Bayly
and Harper manage to give us a cleanly written, balanced overview
of the major shifts and conflicts within conflicts without ever
neglecting telling details and narratives. Whether it's an incognito
Ho Chi Minh wandering through Bangkok before the war, planning his
own little future project, or the image of cattle being driven from
Penang to Singapore in order to avoid them falling into Japanese
hands, (a herd that passes through ports stinking of burning stores
of alcohol and tins of meat before over-running the Singapore golf
course), the writing captures both moment and significance with
minimum fuss. An increasingly frustrated Subhash Bose, a buoyantly
optimistic Aung San and a quietly subterranean Lee Kuan Yew, all
are substantially sketched alongside various British and Japanese
figures, bringing alive that long and dark period from which welled
up so much of our modern history.
Perineum
is a slim first volume of connected short stories by Ambarish Satwik,
a writer who follows in the fine tradition of qualified medical
practitioners bringing their knowledge, eye and experience to the
job of creating fiction. Satwik's conceit is both simple and - no
pun intended here - completely gripping: he places the historical
graph of the Company and Raj firmly (and infirmly) in the nether
regions of the human body, in the area around the lower abdomen.
Different ailments and afflictions itch and sear across the 250
years of uneven British rule, biting and tearing into characters,
throwing up stories and images that range from the tragic to side-splittingly
ribald. To say any more, even in praise, would be a disservice,
save that the book is a must-read for any sub-continental lover
of literature."
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| Tahmima Anam
Author of A Golden Age
"The
book I was most looking forward to reading this year was Junot Diaz's
The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao. After devouring his short
story collection almost seven years ago, I had been waiting breathlessly
for this novel. And it doesn't disappoint: a modern fairy tale about
a family curse, the novel is also peppered with tangents about the
history of the Dominican Republic (warning: there are footnotes)
all done in Diaz's exuberant, improvisational style.
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I
have also enjoyed David Leavitt's The Indian Clerk,
which is about the mathematical genius Srinivasa Ramanujan.
The brilliant thing about this book is that Ramanujan's
story is told from every point of view but his own,
giving us a visceral sense of the mysteriousness and
unknowability of his mind. This technique also helps
to highlight Ramanujan's sense of isolation and loneliness
at Cambridge University, where much of the novel takes
place. Instead, we are surrounded by the misunderstandings
and prejudices of his British colleagues and intellectual
collaborators - most notably GH Hardy, who is haunted
by Ramanujan's early and tragic death.
After
everyone raved endlessly to me about Cormac McCarthy's
The Road, I felt I just had to read it - though I was
really dreading it, knowing that the book is set in
a bleak post-apocalyptic era where the protagonist and
his son are running away from flesh-eating marauders.
But the book really took me by surprise. It is not just
a fierce polemic about the shape of things to come,
but centres around a touching father-son relationship.
At its heart I felt it was a tender love story, all
the more poignant for its being set in such a punishing
world.
Finally,
I must end this round-up with a tip about next year.
I recently read the manuscript of Alice Albinia's history
of the Indus River, Empires of the Indus. This book
is indispensable for anyone interested in the region.
Follow Alice's adventures as she travels (legally and
illegally) across the Pakistan border into Afghanistan,
camps out with all manner of people, and treks to the
source of the river, high up in the Tibetan plateau.
The book is meticulously researched and written with
a deep respect for the cultural and religious diversity
of the Indus valley. Unmissable."
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