"...surely a promising plot"
Rating: 3/5
PLOT: In school-going Vivek’s innocent eyes,
Kaushik Mistry was everything an ideal man ought to be like: he was
intelligent, wise, and humble, he had an appealing personality, he was
successful; in short he was a complete man for whom almost everything was achievable
and worthwhile. Similar were the thoughts of everyone who knew Kaushik. Yet, he was miserable and nobody, in a minuscule town
like Valai, could imagine why.
Caught between the desperate attempts of
Vidya, a fellow female colleague’s obstinate demonstrations of love for HIM and
his own dilemmatic lovesickness for
Vivek; Kaushik, a 26-year old English teacher from Baroda, finds himself
questioning his conscience all the time. Though he is sure of what he wants but
hurting others is not characteristic of him either.
A voracious lover of nature and innately
sensitive to his surroundings and his dear ones, our protagonist Kaushik goes
through a number of phases to some of which he reacts very humanly; hence, ending
up directing himself dissolutely.
Unable to bind his love interests to himself, he is left out torn and
devastated. Moreover, his sexual-orientation poses as a major challenge for him
of acceptance by and survival in the sneeringly orthodox society.
I found it a little slow-paced; I had never
read anything like this which dealt with such a sensitive topic as
homosexuality. Author Mayur Patel has tried well to maintain the curiosity
factor by seasoning the story with cricket, local teenage spectacles and a
persistent threat by a beast on the loose from a jungle.
It surely is a promising plot; however, I,
personally do not read a lot of mush stuff, so I found it only a little agonizing
at some points. The narrative gives an insight of the Western Indian and
South-Western Indian cultures (mainly Gujarat, Maharashtra and Kerala),
enlightening the reader with the composition of some of the local cuisines; the
annual fun melas of Holi. It also draws
a subtle distinction between the urban and the rural lifestyles and general
nature of people found in the two parts.
Recommended to those passionate for
chick-literature, those who would like to attempt to appreciate a topic as perceptive
as homosexuality and to those who simply like to experiment with their reads.
Read on Youth Ki Awaaz
No comments:
Post a Comment