This review of Anuradha Roy's Sleeping on Jupiter appeared in today's Indian Express.
The past is a foreign country, L.P. Hartley famously wrote; they do things differently there. The manner in which the past colonises the present, and the ways in which we attempt to make peace with it can be said to be the subject of all of Anuradha Roy’s fiction so far, including her new novel, the whimsically titled Sleeping on Jupiter.
The past is a foreign country, L.P. Hartley famously wrote; they do things differently there. The manner in which the past colonises the present, and the ways in which we attempt to make peace with it can be said to be the subject of all of Anuradha Roy’s fiction so far, including her new novel, the whimsically titled Sleeping on Jupiter.
As
with her earlier An Atlas of Impossible
Longing and The Folded Earth, this
one features a cast of well-outlined characters, with attention paid to
fleshing out their particularities and points of view. There is, to begin
with, the group of Vidya, Gauri and Latika, friends in their 60s – “three old
biddies from Calcutta”, as a hotel manager dismissively calls them – who embark
on a five-day trip to Jarmuli, a medieval temple town overlooking the Bay of Bengal.
Of this trio, Latika is efficient and gently mocking; Gauri is garrulous and
increasingly afflicted by forgetfulness; and Vidya takes pride in being
practical and sensible. Among the people they meet in Jarmuli is Badal, a
temple guide in his 20s, a graduate from the school of hard knocks whose
street-smart manner conceals an essential naivete. The narrative also circles
around Suraj, a liaison person for a TV production company, with his thwarted
film-making dreams, erratic, violent temper and controlling ways.
Above
all else, Sleeping on Jupiter is the
story of the young Nomi – the well-travelled Nomita Frederiksen, born in India
but adopted by a foster-mother in Oslo, who has returned to Jarmuli in order to
shine a more powerful light upon the fragments of her past. Years ago, Nomi had
been wrenched from her family and fallen into the clutches of a predatory ashram,
witnessing violence and undergoing abuse almost too much for any young person
to withstand. She now faces the challenge of putting these shards together in a
form that will afford release and allow her to move on, depicted in the novel
by means of deft, occasional shifts from first person to third.
With
most such novels written in a realistic mode, there’s a tussle between the
needs of the character and those of the plot. How far can such fictional
individuals be allowed to exist as entities in their own right, and how much do
they have to be manipulated to serve the unfolding narrative? Most of the time,
Roy walks this tightrope with ease, but there are wobbles: easy co-incidences
and neat encounters, however necessary they may be to deepen the plot, do at
times come in the way of the artifice of reality.
All
of Roy’s characters have had things taken away from them, sometimes through violence,
sometimes through time's passage. In some cases, innocence is what has been
waylaid; with others, an intimate relationship has come apart at the seams; with
yet others, it’s the coherent memory of the past that has vanished. The novel progresses
by means of these people engaging and disengaging with each other, and the after-effect
of these meetings and partings yields truths about the world and about
themselves that have so far been concealed or ignored.
The
experience of reading Sleeping on Jupiter
is, for the most part, rich and immersive. Roy’s delineation of Jarmuli is as
atmospheric as that of Ranikhet in her earlier The Folded Earth. In this town by the sea, incense mingles with the
stench of rotting fish, scorching afternoons give way to mellow twilights,
sunlight plays on water that carries ominous currents, cardamom and ginger are
crushed into tea leaves at a stall by the beach, and the stairways and
interiors of intricately carved temples witness a swarm of people, from
visitors to locals, from the devout to the irreligious. This precise
evocation of a sense of place, matched by an equally precise portrayal of interior
states, all in unhurried, unshowy prose, makes Sleeping on Jupiter both accomplished and affecting.
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