by Rohinton Mistry
Warm, humane, tender and bittersweet are not the words one would expect
to describe a novel that portrays a society where the government is
corrupt, the standard of living is barely above poverty level and
religious, ethnic and class divisions poison the community. Yet Mistrys
compassionate eye and his ability to focus on the small decencies that
maintain civilization, preserve the family unit and even lead to
happiness attest to his masterly skill as a writer who makes sense of
the world by using laughter, as one of his characters observes. Bombay
in the mid-1990s, a once-elegant city in the process of deterioration,
is mirrored in the physical situation of elderly retired professor
Nariman Vakeel, whose body is succumbing to the progressive debilitation
of Parkinsons disease. Narimans apartment, which he shares with his two
resentful, middle-aged stepchildren, is also in terrible disrepair. But
when an accident forces him to recuperate in the tortuously crowded
apartment that barely accommodates his daughter Roxana, her husband and
two young boys, family tensions are exacerbated and the limits of
responsibility and obligation are explored with a full measure of
anguish. In the ensuing situation, everyones behavior deteriorates, and
the affecting secret of Narimans thwarted lifetime love affair provides a
haunting leitmotif. Light moments of domestic interaction, a series of
ridiculous comic situations, ironic juxtapositions and tenderly observed
human eccentricities provide humorous relief, as the author of A Fine
Balance again explores the tightrope act that constitutes life on this
planet. Mistry is not just a fiction writer; he's a philosopher who
finds meaning-indeed, perhaps a divine plan in small human interactions.
This beautifully paced, elegantly expressed novel is notable for the
breadth of its vision as well as its immensely appealing characters and
enticing plot. (from Amazon)
DJE: I loved this book. It hearkens back to King Lear. An old man and his daughters. Family Matters is a commentary on ageing in society and it shows how things are not that different in India than the U.S. It's also an introduction to the Parsi community in India (a small but influential group).