Sunday, May 2, 2010

Becky's Review - The White Tiger


Apparently there was a lot of hue and cry when this won the Man Booker Prize in 2008. Critics thought the author, Aravind Adiga, was too young, that the book was too rough, not polished enough. Stuart Jeffries, writing in the Guardian, wonders where Adiga “gets the nerve” to write a novel about the experiences of the Indian poor when he (Adiga) is a child of the Indian privileged class. To this question Adiga responds “I don't think a novelist should just write about his own experiences. Yes, I am the son of a doctor, yes, I had a rigorous formal education, but for me the challenge of a novelist is to write about people who aren't anything like me." I actually think it was kind of insulting for Jeffries to ask this at all; good writers take on other voices all the time.

And Adiga does it effectively. I really liked The White Tiger, which tells the tale of Balram Halwai, a rickshaw puller’s son who, against all odds, pulls himself up by his bootstraps (and commits murder along the way) to get established in the “new India.” The whole book is in the form of a series of letters from Balram to the visiting Chinese premier, and it’s a great device for mixing trenchant observation and humor. Balram lays it all out: the poverty, the abuse at the hands of unscrupulous employers, the corruption of the Indian democracy, the complete lack of health care and education for the laboring classes. It’s like he’s pulled back a curtain on the current image of India as a hotbed of innovation to reveal the ancient sick society underneath. Yet Balram’s optimism, creativity, and verve carry us along.

The white tiger (also known as the Bengal tiger) has long been a symbol of the old India. In this book it is Balram himself who is the white tiger, a rare creature, intelligent, strong, and resourceful.

Read more of my blog posts at A Book a Week.

3 comments:

  1. Nice review, Becky! Thank you for sharing your thoughts on this book.

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  2. Thanks for the info re the White Tiger....I read this book and thoroughly enjoyed it (after fighting it for a long time)....for some weird reason I never thought to ask what The White Tiger meant symbolically...now I know....thank you!

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  3. Hey Becky! First time here. Nice to land on a fellow booklovers blog!

    Actually, I found the White tiger very difficult read. I still haven't completed it although i have it with me for 4 years now!

    I'm inviting you to this new Book Reviews blog. You should consider joining our blog as a reviewer.

    BookReviews is a forum for all of us who believe that books can change us for the better. You can write about any book that you enjoyed reading and motivate people around you to read it. By this, we can help spread the joyous habit of reading, in our own little way.

    You can repost all your book reviews at Book Reviews, both old and new!

    If your excited by this, drop me a mail at bookreviews@bookrack.in and i'll send you an invite

    Cheers
    Booklover

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