Monthly Archives: April 2023

Pyre by Perumal Murngan

Check the official website of the Booker International Prize 2023 for background information on Muugan’s novel.

Wikipedia – Biography

Chicago Review of Books – Review

Times Literary Supplement – Review

Goodreads – Reviews

Washington Independent Review of Books

Tribune India – Review

New Yorker – Profile

Federal – Interview

Aniruddhan Vasudevan – Translator

The birth of a child is often figured as an emblem of regeneration, a symbol of growth that promises healing to the arid dryness of the land. Yet, in Pyre, the expected birth of a child to Kumaresan and Saroja promises only discord and death, a frightening result of crossing the barriers of caste. Kumaresan in Pyre and Samsa in Boulder are equally naive in believing that a child can somehow soften the caste-hardened village system of his own heritage or the rock-hardened personality structure of her partner.

Both of these novels gain their narrative power from the poetic instincts of their authors. In Boulder, the bold use of metaphor as the genesis of character grounds the protagonist to her environment and causes the antagonist to be realized in contrasted relief such as the image of Samsa’s group of mothers gathered to nurse their young. The ambiguous ending of Pyre, its fire-dream embracing the freezing Saroja, leaves the reader with the repetitive sound of Kumaresan’s bicycle. Poetry rather than plot-based denouement.

Boulder by Eva Baltasar

Check the official website of the Booker International Prize 2023 for background information on Baltasar’s novel. To read interviews with longlist writers, check here.

New York Times Review

Gooodreads

Times Literary Supplement

Wikipedia – Biography

Lattin Magazine – Interview

Guardian Review of Permafrost

Barcelona Metropolis – Profile

Boulder reveals herself in a novel in a way that she would never reveal herself in life. In life, she is a boulder, a rock that resists any penetration of the world beyond self. In Eva Baltasar’s novel, however, she reveals herself as the constant victim of the physical world. She is as fragile as the uncooked meat she cuts for the cooking pot. A first-person narrator, this protagonist freely chronicles her responses to the physical world as it attempts to mold her, to restrict her freedom. The artistry of the novel lies in the ability of the writer to depict this duality, to realize the inner and the outer character at the same time for the reader.

Boulder’s life with Samsa is a contrast in character. Boulder and Samsa are E. M. Forster’s two types of characters outlined in his classic Aspects of the Novel. Boulder is the flat character that shows very little change throughout the novel. Samsa, on the other hand, is Forster’s round character, whose complicated changes are foil to Boulder. The tension of the novel is realized as Boulder’s stasis is challenged by Samsa dynamic desire for her own child. This obsession characterizes her complicated personality and confounds Boulder wish for all things to remain the same.

The Booker International Prize — 2023

The longlist was released March 14. The shortlist will be released April 18, and final selection will be announced on May 23. I’ve ordered all of the books and read one, Looks like I’ll be reading a book every five or six days if I want to have them all read by the final celebration. The real challenge will be posting comments.

To preview this baker’s dozen, check out the Booker website.