|
|
|
|
|
“The Weight of Heaven” by Thrity Umrigar
Harper Perennial 365 Pages Paperback
Reviewed by Mahadev Desai
The acclaimed author of the bestselling novels The Space Between
Us; If Today Be Sweet; and powerful and poignant
memoir
First Darling of May; Thrity Umrigar has written yet another
powerful new novel, The Weight of Heaven’. The novel has
generated profuse praise from both literary critics and readers
alike.
To quote some of the laudatory reviews:-“Umrigar is a perceptive
and often piercing writer” New York Times Review.
“The landscape and culture…(are)evocatively depicted…And such
drama!...We’re pulled along by the intensity of this sweeping
cinematic story.”-Elle.” Powerful….Twisty, brimming with dark
humor and keen moral insight, the Weight of Heaven packs a
wallop on both literary and emotional level…Umrigar, a
journalist for the Boston Globe, is a descriptive master.”
Christian Science Monitor.
Educated and liberal American couple Frank and Ellie,living in
Michigan lose their only son, seven year old Benny, to a sudden
illness. Frank blames Ellie for Benny’s death. Both are
devastated by Benny’s death and find their marriage crumbling.
Thinking that a move away from home would help re-unite and heal
them, Frank agrees to manage a factory, Herbal Solutions in a
seaside village Girbaug in India. The Company he works for has
leased thousands of acres of forest land with trees with
medicinal properties. The factory processes the leaves for
diabetic medicine. The villagers resent this intrusion because
these trees are lifeblood to them-they brew, chew and even smoke
the leaves and chop the trees for firewood.
Frank feels like an outsider here. He has to contend with class
and cultural divide and feels confused and cynical. He finds his
employees obsequious,fawning,lazy, incompetent and lacking in
initiative. Death of a trade union activist in prison and
suicide of a villager whose livelihood depended on the trees now
owned by the Company exacerbates Frank’s problems. He still
misses Benny. Till a nine year old Ramesh, son of his cook and
maid, Prakash and his Christian wife Edna, enters into his
life.Ramesh is funny, curious, smart and full of charm, Frank
pays his school fees; helps him with his studies; plays basket
ball with him; and takes him to the beach. Unlike Frank,
Ellie adapts easily to India and its culture.Ellie,a therapist
volunteers at her friend Nandita’s Niral Health Clinic and
school, and is well liked and respected by the village folk.
While Frank tries to spend more time
with Ramesh,Prakash and
Edna feel sidelined.Prakash feels helpless as he is illiterate,
poor and alcoholic. Edna is a conflicted woman, “caught between
the desires of her own heart, and an overpowering ,almost
maternal need to mother her husband and protect him from his own
demons.” She also wants best for Ramesh.
Frank and Ellie take Ramesh to Bombay. Ramesh is awe- struck by
the opulence of the Taj Hotel.Ramesh also gets a taste of
Christmas celebrations in Frank’s home, where Frank gives him a
new computer. Prakash resents all this affection shown to his
son and in a fit of rage snips the wires of the computer and
disables it. Later, to pacify Ramesh, he decides to take him to
Goa to meet his grandparents. While they are away, Frank who is
obsessed with Ramesh, panics and fearing that he might lose
Ramesh for ever, hatches a plot to take Ramesh to America. But
events take unexpected turns at the end.
The novel has rich prose and a fast-paced plot where the author
delves deeply into the inner struggles of her finely etched
characters as well as the impact of globalization on a small
village community in India. In this riveting novel, she
illuminates the human heart in all its longing and imperfection
and also brilliantly captures the texture of India.
India- born Thrity Umrigar is a prolific journalist for over 17
years and associate professor of English at Case Western Reserve
University .She has a Ph.D. in English and lives in Cleveland.
|
| June-18-2010 |
|