Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Jeet. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Jeet. Sort by date Show all posts

Thursday, August 23, 2012

Narcopolis by Jeet Thayil

Narcopolis by Jeet Thayil (2012, 307 pages)

Jeet Thayil's (Kerala, India, 1959) debut novel, Narcopolis, is the only work by an author from India long listed for the 2012 Man Booker Prize.   There has lately been a number of works published that seek to show us the "real world" of the Indian mega-cities, the world beyond the international headquarters and the Rolex dealerships.   Narcopolis succeeds wonderfully in this task.  He shows the city of Bombay ( I confess I  prefer to call it this rather than Mumbai and I think most if the residents of the city feel the same way)  transitioning from the mid-1970s when internatiolnal companies first began to make use of the vast pool of cheap college educated labor in India to do its backroom and call center work.   What makes Narcopolis so powerful is  how Thayil tells the story of Bombay through the lives of its most despised citizens, transsexual prostitutes, their clients and drug addicts.  

As the story opens, the male narrator has just arrived from New York City.   He finds himself  fascinated by the dark side of the big city, in his case with an opium den and a brothel associated with it.   This is not a brothel that services the needs of rich Indians and foreign business executives who want to have an Indian woman.  It is one of the very cheapest sex establishments in Bombay.   Most of the clients are poor but some can afford better but just like the sensation of filth and decadence.    He develops a relationship with a brothel worker named Dimple, who was born as a boy but was castrated at a young age and sold to the brothel operators. She lives and dresses as a woman.  I really liked her character and I was very moved when she taught herself to read.   As the novel progresses, Dimple becomes more and more educated but never really imagines another life for herself.   There is a lot to say about the reading life in this novel and I loved that part of it especially.  It rang very true to me, how the pleasure of reading, if you can really call it that, can endure when the others are lost and how it can magnify your pain as well.

The changes in Bombay are mirrored in the drugs that are most popular in the streets and dens of the city.   At the start it is opium but as the story ends it is  a version of heroin that is dominant.   We get to know a number of people through their visits to the brothel.   The men in the brothel feel they can open themselves up in the conversations with Dimple and others who work  there (after all who cares what a transsexual prostitute think of you).   One of the most interesting characters is a Chinese business man who mourns the decay of Chinese culture under the great leap forward.   One of the short segments, there are many fascinating interludes, I liked most concerned an artist who painted pictures of Jesus as if he were a figure from Indian two thousand years ago.  The descriptions are beautiful and go deeply into the issues of merging the values of old India with western culture.  It also eroticses Jesus and forces you to see him as a transfiguration of masculinity.   There are deep issues here and Thayil takes us quite far into them.    

Using opium is depicted as a slow languorous very mellow social process done in a ritualistic fashion in traditions that go back to the long ago.   It is a social activity.   From this as time process and Bombay decays, the drug of choice becomes synthetic chemicals which only destroy their users.   The narrator loves drugs, he loves the brothel and the chaos of Bombay but he sees the death in it.

This is not a book for the squeamish or for those who want to be driven around the best parts of Bombay in a limo with very dark windows so you can pretend you feel bad for the poor, but really you tell yourself it is actually their fault for being so shiftless and practicing a religion you have no ability to understand.   This story began when the British tried to rule India and is very much about the effects of colonizing on the psyche of India.


Narcopolis shows us the fools games behind the international headquarters, the malls and the mansions.

The prose is beautiful.   I really liked the close of the novel.

I totally endorse this book with the qualification it is not for those who shy away from graphic sex and improper language.

This is a challenging book but one that will way over payback your efforts.

I was provided a free copy this book.

Author Bio


Jeet Thayil

Jeet Thayil was born in Kerala, India, and educated in Hong Kong, New York and Bombay. His poetry collections includeEnglish and Apocalypso. He is the editor of Give the Sea Change and It Shall Change: Fifty-Six Indian Poets(Fulcrum) and Divided Time: India and the End of Diaspora(Routledge). His new book of poems These Errors are Correct is forthcoming from East West. He lives in Bangalore.


Mel u

Wednesday, March 27, 2019

The Thief - A Short Story by Shakti Bhatt - 2006






My post on Necropolis by Jeet Thayil - Short Listed for the 2012 Booker Prize - Husband of Shakti Bhatt


“The Thief” - A Short Story by Shakti Bhatt - 2006

Born 1981 Delhi

Passes 2007 - Delhi

Shaki Bhatt was a writer and editor.  Her early death was a shock to the Indian literary world.  A foundation set up in her memory has since 2008 presented an annual best debut work award for writers of the subcontinent.  

“Bloggers in India have been mourning the untimely death of Shakti Bhatt, who passed away in Delhi last Saturday night after a sudden and unexpected illness. Shakti – who was in her mid-twenties – was the editor of Indian publishing house IBD’s newly launched Bracket Books and the wife of well-known Indian poet Jeet Thayil.” From Global Voices - April 5, 2007

I found several website memorializing her but I could find nothing by her for sale or online.

In 2012 I posted on Necropolis by Jeet Thayil, short listed for the Booker Price.  He was the husband of Shakti Bhatt.  His book is a brilliantly dark account of the underside of Mumbai.  I reread my old blog post and the book came vividly back to me.  

“The Thief” is set in an affluent multi generation family home in Delhi.  The household is run by the grandmother. As we meet her she is negotiating with an applicant for a job as a maid as to what she will and will not do. The maid agrees to cook, wash dishes, answer the phones, do personal errands but not clean.  We learn this is a matter of caste.  The grandmother tells the young narrator that Maids often hire lower caste maids to clean their own rooms.

I really enjoyed the descriptions of the many tradespeople who call on the house.  Reading the food descriptions was a lot of fun.  Bhatt brings the family environment to life.  This is a very good short story.  There is a dramatic turn when a valuable ring of the grandfather shows up missing.

I read this in a worthwhile anthology Kasha: Short Stories by Indian Women

If anyone knows of more works by Shakti Bhatt, please let me know.

I would love to read more of her work.



This is part of our Short Stories by South Asian Women project.  

Oleander Bousweau 
Mel u

























Friday, December 28, 2012

The Reading Life Big Reads of 2012



The top 15 books are in order of my regard for the book, after that the order is purely random.  There is not a second rate book on this list.
  1. Don Quixote by Miguel de Cervantes-just might be the big read of my life. I hope to reread every year for the rest of my life
  2. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy- beyond a point to praise it-War and Peace in 2013
  3. Gulliver's Travels by Jonathan Swift-greatest  work of satire ever written-deep as deep can be
  4. A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens-one of the best opening chapters in the history of the novel.
  5. Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
  6. The Untouchable by Mulk Raj Anand  a total must read-in my best 100 books of the 20th century.  One day in the life of an Untouchable in  Indian in the 1930s
  7. Happiness Comes From Nowhere by Shauna Gilligan one of the best debut novels I have read in decades.
  8. Father and Son by Ivan Turgenev -classic-also a short Russian novel!
  9. Silas Marner by George Eliot -a very good very readable work-would be an excellent first Eliot
  10. Hard to Say by Ethel Rohan  I love the work of this writer
  11. Family Matters by Rohinton Mistry-I think he will also be listed in 2013-wonderful Mumbai novel
  12. A House of Cards by Elizabeth MacDonald-a beautiful collection of storiesful set in Tuscany-
  13. Mother America by Nuala Ní Chonchúir  a wonderful very creative collection of short stories
  14. The Vagrants by Yiyun Li  powerful novel about China during the Mao years
  15. Beyond the Beautiful Forever:  Life, Hope and Death in a Mumbai Undercity by Katherine Boo-this book will become a classic
  16. The Etruscan by Linda Lappin-might also become a classic 
  17. The Weight of Feathers by Geraldine Mills a very original collection of short stories
  18. Zoli by Colum McCann  great novel set in the Roma culture
  19. Border Lines by John Walsh an excellent collection of mostly set in Ireland short stories
  20. Late Victorian  Holocausts: El Nino Famines and the Making of the Third World by Mike Davis-must read history  
  21. The West: Stories From Ireland by Eddie Stack wonderful stories in the tradition of the Irish story teller.
  22. The Crying of Lot 49 by Thomas Pynchon this should be your first Pynchon
  23. Listening To Dust by Brandon Shire  the only writer listed for two years in a row-I hope he writes enough and I last long enough to list twenty of his works
  24. What's Not Said by James Martyn Joyce   noir  stories of the dark side of the mean streets of Ireland
  25. Narcopolis by Jeet Thayil  This should have won the Man Booker Prize-it was short listed
  26. Miss Lonelyhearts by Nathaniel West  -if you have never read this book, put what ever you are reading on hold and read this at once.
  27. Germinal by Emile Zola depressing but hugely important
  28. The Dancers Dancing by Eilis Ni Dhuibhne brilliant very funny novel about the Literary high life in Ireland during the years of the Celtic tiger-
  29. The Testament of Mary by Colm Toibin  very thought provoking
  30. King Leopold's Ghost by Adam Hochschild must read non-fiction about the Belgian Congo
  31. Let the Great World Spin by Colum McCann wonderful work
  32. The Sea by John Banville  place your self in the hands of a master.
  33. A Star Called Henry by Roddy Doyle the first of a trilogy-the life of an IRA hitman from birth to early twenties.  I read five of Doyle's novels in 2012 and hope to read five more in 2013
  34. 30 Under 30:  Stories by Irish Writers Under 30-edited by Elizabeth Reapy-a great anthology
  35. Portrait of a Novel: Henry James and the Making of An American Masterpiece by Michael Gorra -a must read book for anyone into Henry James and a brilliant lesson in how to read a novel.
  36. As Close As You'll Ever Be by Seamus Scanlon  more stories of the mean streets of Ireland
  37. Somewhere in Minnesota by Orfhlaith Foyle  a powerful collection short stories
  38. The China Factory by Mary Costello a debut short story collection by a major talent
I read a lot of good books in 2012.  I hope to read more in 2013.  





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