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Announcements: |
For watchers
of this space...
Eight months and still waiting for the verdict on my two books. I don't know
what's wrong, if I should contact the publishers and find out if they are at
all interested in them. This wringing of hands, this eternal anxiety, this
indecision, to say the least, is killing. An author invests a lot of time
and money on a book and to find it is not acceptable could be devastating,
one can simply stop writing altogether and go into a shell. Nothing of that
sort is happening to me, as I am still active literary boards, blogs and
writing comments and criticisms. This keeps the juices, sort of, flowing. As
Lokmanya Tilak said when he was convicted for sedition, "There are bigger
things that govern the destiny of man." He is a hero, no mean writer
himself, and I believe his words. Also my latest short story Seats, Red Spit
and Being Steve Smith featured in my short story blog
Unendingstories has got
good reactions from the boards.
Recently, I was invited to
attend the "Kritya International Poetry Festival" organized by Kritya in
Thiruvanathapuram, Kerala. Those two days in Kerala were like a peek into a
transient heaven. Like all heavens, it also passed in seconds. Pictures of
the festival can be viewed on my photoblog
Johnclicks.
Penguin-Sulekha "India
Smiles" Short Story Collection Is Out!

"India Smiles" the
collection of short stories that won Penguin-Sulekha's global short story
contest has recently been published by Penguin India. This is what the book
jacket looks like. Do buy it if you see it in stores. It features my short
story "Flirting in
Short Messages."
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Review
of CP Surendran's debut novel "An Iron Harvest"
Poet
and columnist CP Surendran's debut novel "An Iron Harvest" is a living
chronicle of how an industrially backward state took a leap into radical
ideology of the industrial era (communism) to find itself slowly enmeshed in
a seemingly unending class struggle.
Communism has been a by-product of the industrial age of systematic
production, streamlined marketing and shrewed people management and its
failure is in most parts because of the eclipsing of the industrial age by
the information age. The information age is another deal. Here people work
as if no clocks exists. But still, communism continues to thrive and prosper
in an industrially backward state, Kerala, and has fanatical adherents there
who believe that revolution is possible and that workers of the world can
rule countries. CP Surendran's novel depicts such a group of people who is
bent on carrying on with the idea of revolution.
Kerala is the first state in the world to elect a communist government by a
democratic voting process in 1959. Almost half a century later, it is today
(in 2007) ruled by a communist government though all over the world
communist governments have failed. Communist Russia and China have embraced
market realities and its communal ideologies have been washed away by
capitalism. But Kerala still adheres to Marx and his teachings of dialectic
materialism. The exploited labour force still believe that only a communist
revolution can redeem their plight, and have a stranglehold over industrial
enterprises across the state.
It is in such a revolution that John, ersatz Che Guevera, protagonist of
Surendran's novel fights for his ideology, and believes he can achieve with
this associates. He along with his band of men are killing evil landlords,
attacking police stations, terrorizing the ruling class to bring about a
revolution (remember Crasto and Che Guevara took over Cuba with just eighty
men, they had the backing of the people).
They call themselves "Red Earth" and this breakaway group of leftists is led
by Varkeychayan, who is an erstwhile communist leader. John's comrades are a
motley group who use sickles, matchets, and crude country-made rifles to
achieve revolution. But in what sense? Could a revolution in one state of
India transform into a mass movement to take over a country such as India
which has world's second largest army to protect it? They achieve in some
measure to spread terror among the landed classes and the ruling elite.
Ironically the epoch is the emergency days of Indira Gandhi and Kerala's
home minister Marar has deputed commissioner Raman to hunt down the radical
revolutionaries. Raman is a bachelor given to lascivious thoughts,
masturbates copiously, presumably because sex is unavailable in conservative
Kerala. But he is shown by the author as ruthless and powerful, despite his
puny appearance.
Abey, an innocent student in John's college is picked up by the police for
questioning. He dies in the police lock up at Raman's behest as a result of
the police's highhanded interrogation methods. His father Sebastian makes it
life's mission to get justice for his dead son. He is helped in this mission
by Nambiar, the Inspector General of police - a theatre aficionado,
therefore an artist - who is at loggerheads with the ambitious Raman.
Surendran is at ease with his narration of the beautiful Kerala conuntryside,
and its customs. What this author liked best about the book is that to a
great extend Surendran has succeeded in capturing the Malayalis'
aspirations, behavior and "mentality" with his words. All through the book a
Malayali's innate cynicism, humour and wit is amply depicted.
The author's prose has poetic inclination right from the start. Examples:
"The sky paled in slivers over the paddy fields and rivers and, in between
them, the railway tracks bared themselves in the first light like bones of
distance. A necklace of white birds flew past in the East." Who but a poet
can write such elevating prose?
Raman's life and actions provide comic relief throughout the novel. His
deviationist look at women and sex is told hilariously, especially his
encounter with his subordinate Vijayan's wife. "Mrs. Vijayan spoke very
fast, as if she had only one breath to speak and a great deal to tell," a
very apt description of some fast-talking Malayalis I have seen and met.
Raman is ruthlessly caricatured throughtout the novel. His discription of
the excesses of the emergency as seen through Sebastian's eyes brings home
the terror of those dark days.
I would have loved it if John's relationship with his love Janaki was
explored a little more in detail and intimacy. All in all, a well-crafted,
intricately woven novel that looks not only at the radicalisation of God's
chosen state, but also provides a window through which to view Kerala and
its people.
Surendran's novel is dark but with a purpose. He
takes the reader on a new high with sharp observations and pointed irony. He
tells the tale of a people caught in a time warp trying to exorcise the
ghost of an ideology that has failed, and like obsessive love, compounds it
by going even further in an unproductive attempt to revive the lost magic.
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