Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Villainy by Upamanyu Chatterjee

VillainyVillainy by Upamanyu Chatterjee
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

A graphic description of life in Delhi – a wealthy, philandering Mercedes-loving businessman, a rich spoilt brat, policemen with varying degrees of efficiency and sleaze, a dedicated mortuary attendant, a loyal driver, judges and lawyers of every ilk, the streets of Delhi, criminal courts, gaols and life within for venal supervisors and inmates – both innocent, as well as convicted, sundry canines, road rage and its consequences in the murderous traffic of India’s capital city, immigrants from mofussil towns across the ‘cow belt’, predatory ‘god-men.’ Here is a passage equating crime with quantum mechanics
The principles of villainy and uncertainty appear to be beguilingly familiar. They are all terribly all-pervasive, for one, and further, one can never be fully certain wither of what constitutes villainy, of whether it is not governed, just as much as the principle of uncertainty, by the four cardinal characteristics of time, location, movement and spin, and of whether it is not just unstable, volatile – and slippery, in short.
The ending is somewhat, disappointingly, abrupt and uncertain – unsatisfying after the detailed narrative.

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Monday, May 16, 2022

The Hair Carpet Weavers by Andreas Eshbach

The Hair Carpet WeaversThe Hair Carpet Weavers by Andreas Eschbach
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

An unusual SF yarn, where the author addresses issues like religion – the opiate of the masses, immortality –the futility of a Methuselan existence, existentialism, genocide and vengeance. On one level it is allegorical account of Nazi war crimes – the horror experienced by the Allies on the ‘liberation’ of the concentration camps. It is also a gripping story – starting slow, meandering along on a backward planet and, with the introduction of more characters, then bounding all over the galaxy.
At first glance the carpet weaving culture appears to be a social welfare program along the lines of MGNREGA
Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Act (MGNREGA) is an Indian job guarantee scheme, enacted by legislation on August 25, 2005. The scheme aims at enhancing the livelihood security of people in rural areas by guaranteeing hundred days of wage-employment in a financial year to a rural household whose adult members volunteer to do unskilled manual work.
However, the denouement reveals the sinister, albeit petty, truth behind this pan-galactic enterprise.

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