The White Tiger: A Novel
by Aravind Adiga
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 160)
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read-in-2008
Read in June, 2008
recommends it for:
People who like to learn about the world
A really fascinating look at the underbelly of Indian culture from the viewpoint of a driver of a rich landlord -- industrialist in India. The White Tiger, a poor boy who without any formal education becomes a wealthy man recounts his path to wealth in a series of letters to the Chinese Premier who is visiting India. (Personally this style fo the story made little sense but the story told was fresh and interesting and informative)
Balran decides that the way to get out from under his Grandm...more
Balran decides that the way to get out from under his Grandm...more
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Read in May, 2008
This is the kind of book that many people try to write and few succeed at. The White Tiger is an awesome book and anyone who is even remotely interested in India will enjoy it. The author is a former Time magazine writer and the first great thing he accomplishes is painting an effortless picture of modern India, from its poorest slums to the wealthier areas where more Westernized Indians make a living doing computer and telephone work for American companies (and then go spend their salaries at ...more
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fiction---india
Read in September, 2008
Another fine entry on the Booker Prize longlist for 2008, and I must say, this is the first year that I've been reading the longlist where I've really enjoyed every book I've read. With only three more of these books to go I'm simply amazed at how well the judges chose this year. What's even more amazing is that White Tiger is Adiga's first novel. He will definitely be on my list of authors to watch in the future.
At some point the main character Balram Halwai recounts a story about the ...more
At some point the main character Balram Halwai recounts a story about the ...more
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Read in June, 2008
Very well done. The concept is this: The White Tiger, aka Munna, aka Balram, is an Indian man writing a letter to the premier of China, who will soon be visiting the country. As we find out very early, Balram is from a very poor village but currently finds himself an "entrepeneur" working in a developing Indian city. Also, he murdered his former master.
What develops from here is a very well done self-analysis of the events, decisions, and other attendant circumstances ultimatel...more
What develops from here is a very well done self-analysis of the events, decisions, and other attendant circumstances ultimatel...more
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Read in June, 2008
So, here we are again in India. We're still on the master and slave dialectic, but now the English are gone and both parties are Indian. The more things change...
"White Tiger" follows the employment history of its main character as written to a Chinese ambassador in a series of letters. Basically, it's a Cinderella story, except that Cinderella never killed her evil stepmother and ran away to Bangalore to make even more money (though I would be eager to see this in the Disney versi...more
"White Tiger" follows the employment history of its main character as written to a Chinese ambassador in a series of letters. Basically, it's a Cinderella story, except that Cinderella never killed her evil stepmother and ran away to Bangalore to make even more money (though I would be eager to see this in the Disney versi...more
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Best contemporary novel I've read this year. Antidote for the pastel lyricism of most mainstream novels coming out of India and a wonderful social satire with savage bit. Kind of like Terry Southern's best work if he hadn't been all weeded up and goofy.
An image from it that sticks with me is how Ghandi's image gets appropriated by the current Indian bureaucracy. Whenever the narrator encounters the hanging Ghandi portrait he sees it as a symbol of "bribes work here, corruption at...more
An image from it that sticks with me is how Ghandi's image gets appropriated by the current Indian bureaucracy. Whenever the narrator encounters the hanging Ghandi portrait he sees it as a symbol of "bribes work here, corruption at...more
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Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
people who enjoyed Hamid's "The Reluctant Fundamentalist" and Pears' "The Portrait"
A stunning first person narrative about a self-proclaimed murderer and entrepreneur. Balram Halwai, the complex narrator of the book, describes, in an obsessive, single-focued, unapologetic letter, his journey out of poverty from the Indian Darkness. It is a story about ambition, corruption, and power -- an amazing story about how one person in a country of servitude escapes his own station to become a man. Is he a visionary? Is he an iconoclast? Is he an amoral monster? The reader goes on a ver...more
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Read in May, 2008
recommended to Erin by:
my boyfriend
i read the back of the book and was really interested in the premise... then i started reading and wasn't as dazzled as i thought i would be. but i felt the same way about life of pi, so i stuck it out. i have to admit this book grew on me despite myself. i fell into the rhythm of the writing -- which takes a bit of time. once i found the narrator's voice, the book evened out for me. its maybe not so seemy and gritty as the book jacket would have you believe, but its definitely worth a read...more
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Read in July, 2008
recommended to Jessica by:
Israel
like a combination of rushdie & gary shteyngart, except it's his first novel, so obviously more the latter than the former. satirical, irreverent, & as mocking of his own narration as he is of the lopsided india he tears into, restraining the sort of thorough knowledge of internal policy you can find in his articles & essays in favor of a more comic & accessible character, funny, ...more
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Read in May, 2008
I love reading books set in other cultures, as I learn so much about the people and places and their history. The White Tiger, set in India, offers the reader glimpses into various aspects of Indian life, and it is not always comfortable to read. In this, Adiga's first novel, he shows himself to be an amazing storyteller, and the plot unfolds like layers of an onion being peeled away. His writing is in turn humorous, heart-wrenching, and tragic. I empathized with Balram, the protagonist from...more
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Read in August, 2008
My first Booker nominated read of this year. And a nice gentle place to kick off. A quick easy read showing the grimier side of India.
I liked the tone of the narrator. I felt he was confessional and engaging and kept me hooked. I also found him mildly amusing.
Some striking moments in the prose, but not that many. This was a character led novel as opposed to plot or prose led for me.
Doubt it will win, but ok.
For more impressions on this book or other Booker Prize nominated no...more
I liked the tone of the narrator. I felt he was confessional and engaging and kept me hooked. I also found him mildly amusing.
Some striking moments in the prose, but not that many. This was a character led novel as opposed to plot or prose led for me.
Doubt it will win, but ok.
For more impressions on this book or other Booker Prize nominated no...more
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Read in June, 2008
Amazing story, set modern day Bangalore, told as a series of letters to the Chinese Premier. Told in retrospect, Balram is now a successful entrepreneur after killing his boss/master and escaping to Bangalore.
Born into a poor family, he manages to escape his village and move to Delhi after being hired as a driver for a rich landlord. The landlord and his wife treat him in a terrible fashion, yet believe they are "good" to him since he's only a peasant. Balram details his life s...more
Born into a poor family, he manages to escape his village and move to Delhi after being hired as a driver for a rich landlord. The landlord and his wife treat him in a terrible fashion, yet believe they are "good" to him since he's only a peasant. Balram details his life s...more
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indian
Read in August, 2008
"If you are tired of Indian novels built on a blend of saffron and saris then Aravind Adiga’s The White Tiger (2008) may just be the antidote required. It’s take on modern India is one more grounded in reality than romantic idealism, straddling the thin line between the historical hangovers of British rule and ingrained caste system with the thriving industry of entrepreneurship now prevalent in outsourced business, such as information technology and call centres."
Read my full ...more
Read my full ...more
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paints a vivid picture of contemporary india. the narrator is someone you do wish to spend a lot of time with -- he (and his character) is probably the most original and fascinating aspect of the novel, which i found to be somewhat lacking in terms of narrative pull. it's probably obvious to compare this to shteyngart's 'absurdistan', but it quickly came to mind, as a sketchy narrator shedding new light on the underbelly of worlds we already felt that we knew. and like 'absurdistan', i didn't...more
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Read in March, 2008
recommended to 4am by:
freePressrecommends it for: someone looking for a good story
If you want a gritty, honest look at the class structure in India told in a delightful fiction work, read The White Tiger. In this not typical rags-to-riches story, Balran Halwai should be working at a tea shop all his life, but instead turns driver and then murderer.
I'll stop there and let the reader discover the rest. I cannot recommend this book too highly to those who enjoy a good story, but at the same time I warn you that this will change the way you look at India. And that might not be...more
I'll stop there and let the reader discover the rest. I cannot recommend this book too highly to those who enjoy a good story, but at the same time I warn you that this will change the way you look at India. And that might not be...more
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Read in May, 2008
Though the novel has an original premise and wit sprinkled throughout, he tried to cram too much into one novel. His rants (as well as some very good observations) about corruption in India were heavy handed. The major weakness, in my opinion, was the uneven descent of the narrator. This is not for those fans of Jhumpa Lahiri or Anita Desai; this is a very different view of contemporary India.
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Read in March, 2008
Sort of interesting novel about life in modern India and what a colonial past and modernizing present have done to its morality. Probably more interesting to those who already like reading about India or culture-based novels like Hosseini's works, etc. I read an Advance Reader's Copy on my lunch breaks at work over a week or so. Not great, but not bad. It comes out in April if you're interested.
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Great book. I especially liked the sense of humor running throughout White Tiger -- it's clever without doing that annoying self-aware and constantly ironic thing. The book manages to spoof class issues in India, consumerism in America, and generally becoming that which you hate most all in the form of a crime story (and all within the format of a letter to the Premier of China).
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Read in April, 2008
I had high hopes for this book based on the blurb, but was ultimately let down. I didn't care enough about the protagonist to invest in his self-obsessed journey. I felt the lessons of the story were unclear and though I found the descriptions of street life in India to be fresh and informational, it became repetitive and depressing. The gimick of speaking to the premier of one of the fastest growing markets in the country (china) was alluring at first, but became tired.
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Read in July, 2008
Totally a new view of India - not the abject cruelty that was A Fine Balance, and not the ornate world of Rushdie. (I swear, my view of India is quite a bit wider than than two whole writers, but I have been reading a lot more about the diaspora lately.) I'm not totally sold on the narrative device, but I loved the India/China stuff (so true!), the nouveau riche characterization, and the baldly anti-heroic protagonist. Looking forward to Adiga's second book . . .
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