Book Review
In one of the first pages of this book, the author
cautions us to “read this book as you would a novel.” No one can remember the
events of their lives accurately. Roy says that “most of us are a living,
breathing soup of memory and imagination … and we may not be the best arbiters
of which is which.” What you remember may not be what happened exactly. As we
get on with the painful process called life, we keep rewriting our own
narratives.
The book does read like a novel. Not
because Roy has fictionalised her and her mother’s lives. The characters of
these two women are extremely complex, that’s why. Then there is Roy’s style
which transmutes everything including anger and despair into lyrical poetry.
There’s a lot of pain and sadness in this book. The way Roy narrates all that
makes it quite a classic in the genre of memoirs.
The book is not so much about Roy’s
mother Mary as about that mother’s impact on the daughter’s very being.
Arundhati was born in the undivided Assam in 1961. Her father was a Bengali who
was a manager in a tea estate. He was an alcoholic. When the 1962 war started
between India and China, the family was forced to move out from the border
region. Mary Roy took the two children and went to Ooty where her father had a
cottage. Her father was an Imperial Entomologist.
Mary and her little children were
soon evicted from that cottage by her own mother and brother. According to the
Travancore Christian Succession Act, daughters had no right to their father’s
property. Getting this Act annulled is one of the revolutionary deeds that Mary
Roy would accomplish later in her eventful life. Ironically, that brother who
evicted her from the small cottage in Ooty would himself be evicted from his
own ancestral home later when Mary Roy wins her case against the succession
act.
Mary Roy emerged as a champion of
many things in Kerala. She opened a school in her village and that went on to
become one of the most sought-after schools in the region. She was admired by
her students. But her own son and daughter found it impossible to live with
her. Arundhati left her mother at the age of 16 in order “to be able to
continue to love her.” Loving Mother Mary wasn’t quite an easy thing to do. She
was extremely temperamental, “crazy, unpredictable, magical, free, fierce.”
The formidable Mother Mary sometimes
becomes a caricature in the book, though that caricaturisation is done
intentionally. For example, when she went to Trivandrum to invite Laurie Baker
to come and construct her school building, she is accompanied by an assistant
to carry Mary’s bag that contained water, a flask of coffee, “egg sandwiches,
emergency medicines, the asthma inhaler and the spare asthma inhaler.” The
assistant also had “round peacock-feather fan” with which she was to keep
fanning “my hot (in every sense of the word) mother.” A young apprentice of
Laurie Baker would later describe Mary as a crazy woman. This young apprentice
also became Arundhati’s first life-partner. Their marriage is described by the
author as “Jesus marries a Japanese parcel.” Such metaphors abound in this
book.
Later Pradip Krishen will introduce
her to the movie-world and also become her life-partner. Writing becomes her
passion after her adventures with movies. The second half of the book is about
her writing career, activism, and the various threats she has had to face. Some
of her own fictional characters appear in this section as powerful metaphors. Many
of the chapters in this section are titled after Roy’s own books and essays.
Mother Mary hovers over these pages
though the author lived far away from her. “Like an unaffectionate iron angel.
The metallic swoosh of her iron wings spurred me to pick the big fights, not
the small ones.” The fights are the ideological ones Arundhati Roy took up
ceaselessly giving us such powerful essays as ‘The Algebra of Infinite Justice’
and ‘Walking with the Comrades.’ Mother Mary didn’t approve of such writings
entirely; but she admired them.
Very few authors can write as
candidly as Roy about their own lives. So poetically. So metaphorically and yet
factually. Reading this book is both a delight and a pain. We move between a
paradise and a graveyard, like Anjum the protagonist of The Ministry of
Utmost Happiness. Mother Mary is hugely responsible for the creation of
that ambiguous reality. It is exciting to meet that “Warrior Dreamer Teacher”
[Mary’s epitaph] and the Warrior Writer Enigma she gave birth to much against
her will.
Arundhati Roy never hides behind politeness or convention. Whether she’s writing about love, caste, or resistance, she lays feelings bare — raw, flawed, and human.
ReplyDeleteTrue, but one change I noticed in this book is the transmutation of all that rawness into poetry of sorts.
DeleteA very engaging read.
ReplyDelete🙏
DeleteComment from an expert critic's hand adds a lot of value to the book. Thank you for such an insightful review which is really beyond ordinary readers' perception. ---Dawnanddew
ReplyDeleteThere's a lot more to add, but I didn't want to prolong the review.
DeleteWarrior, Writer, Poet, Social Activism, punned on to her sleeves to the Activist, who moved the pen, mightily...
ReplyDeleteAll those together make her an enigma.
DeleteHari OM
ReplyDeleteAn excellent review which teases us to add this book to our TBR pile! YAM xx
I would love to hear your view on the book.
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