Siddharth Tripathi's Blog - Posts Tagged "review"

The Virgins Flash Fiction Contest

Here's a chance to talk about your favorite city -- your hometown, the city you went to college in, the place where you live now...

Presenting The Virgins Flash fiction contest...for details click here -

http://thetalespensieve.com/2013/06/3...
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A debut with a lot of promise - Deccan Herald's review of the Virgins

This appeared in Sunday Herald (DH's Sunday supplement) on the 17th of Nov.
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A debut with a lot of promise
ARKADEV GHOSHAL, NOV 17, 2013, DHNS : AA
The Virgins
Siddharth Tripathi
Fingerprint
2013, pp 320
250

Avid readers of fiction have different ways to tell if they have liked a story. However, the commonest among them is to see if the characters of the book remain in memory long after the last page has been turned.

That's one of the successes of debutant author Siddharth Tripathi. The protagonists, antagonists and even minor characters he fleshes out in The Virgins remain in your thoughts long after the book has been read.

For a first-time writer, Tripathi's prose is lucid enough to show promise of greater things to come. There is more than a hint of style in how he develops his characters and dispenses information to his readers, and that further whets the readers' appetite. And then, there's the story itself. The way he builds it bears the hallmark of a master storyteller just beginning to come into his own.

The three people around whom the narrative revolves are Varanasi-residents Pinku, Guggi and Bhandu - their real names are rarely of use or consequence in the book. The story begins with Guggi and Bhandu abandoning a hapless Pinku in front of a girls' hostel, to be chased and beaten by a cop, after Guggi tries to attract the girls' attention by shouting at them his "introduction".

As things move forward, we learn that Pinku is one of the elder siblings of a family whose head had deserted it years ago, only to return later and mooch off his wife and son's earnings. And this wasn't even the first time he had been abandoned thus. On an earlier occasion, when Guggi had deserted him while trying to steal a flowerpot, he had taken the rap, but not without falling for the young girl of that house.

Bhandu, on the other hand, is battling to score some good marks in his board exams, especially because his mother is a professor, and despite his parents separation amid reports of his father's adultery. He also wants to score the family-abandoning American woman who frequents one of the holy city's ghats, but she doesn't even seem to know he exists.

Finally, there's Guggi, whose outrageous - and often criminally-minded - plans, each of which he chooses to describe as "sexpot" for some reason, cause him enormous glee, but spell doom for friends who dare to accompany him. The son of a corrupt IAS officer who gets cut down to size, Guggi goes to great lengths to take over the protection racket - yes, the students need protection, if not from one another, then from outside forces who take sides in quarrels.

Guggi's actions form a major theme of the story, but also notable in the narrative is the treatment of student politics and an undercurrent of violence that seems omnipresent in all walks of life in parts of Uttar Pradesh.

Also noteworthy is Tripathi's development of minor characters and his effort to showcase different aspects of human nature through them. One can't help but feel sad for the fate of the peaceful tea-stall owner, who can do precious little to stop one or more of his rich customers from leering at or harassing his teenage daughter.

All in all, The Virgins may not be the best debut novel of recent times, but is definitely jostling to climb up. One can indeed expect much bigger things from Tripathi.

- See more at: http://m.deccanherald.com/content/369...
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Published on November 22, 2013 21:36 Tags: book, deccan-herald, november, review, siddharth-tripathi, the-virgins

Win a review copy

The Virgins is on TTP's Reviewers Programme.

APPLY TO REVIEW:

http://thetalespensieve.com/reviewers...
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Published on December 08, 2013 05:49 Tags: apply, copy, review, review-copy, tales-pensieve, the-virgins

MenXP reviews Blowfish

Some quotes from the review

"It's easy to relate to the protagonists; for the simple reason that the protagonists are a reflection of the reader. Through most of the scenarios that the author takes you through in Blowfish, you'll be able to find some incredibly relatable instance of your own life glaring back at you. And that's why you should read Blowfish, Because nothing will relate and connect with you better; not even the next guy who's probably going through something similar."

"...you'll find that Tripathi has a particular brand of wit that is fast, funny and hard-hitting. Tripathi paints a realistic picture of everyday scenarios and manages to craft a story that is one of every Indian guy. He isn't a Chetan Bhagat, or a Durjoy Dutta. He doesn't paint it any colour that it isn't meant to be. So, if you're looking for storylines that border on a Bollywood script, you might not find it in Blowfish. What you will find is an absence of flashy cars, posh bungalows and melodrama that is overhyped at the very least. You will find WagonRs, typical Gurgaon traffic jams and moments of happiness and joy in the little, more real instances that happen—both, in the book and in real life."

http://www.mensxp.com/culture/arts/39...

Buy it here - https://www.amazon.in/Blowfish-Siddha...
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Published on September 21, 2017 04:23 Tags: blowfish, book, gurgaon, gurugram, india, menxp, novel, review