Vivek Shanbhag's Ghachar Ghochar looked at moral reformulations after the opening up of the economy in the early 90s. Sakina's Kiss has its eye turned on our more recent moral confusions. The timing goes well with talk of the 'New India novel' in Indian English, one that looks at a post-2014 India through new prisms. Shanbhag's novel moves towards its historical time mildly, tangentially, from the dining table, even -- an approach that appears different from most examples one has read this year of this still-developing genre. Perhaps the novel it can be claimed to resemble is Anjum Hasan's History's Angel. In both novels, no names are taken; the thud of Event is missing; there are no life-and-death situations, only suggestions of harm; there are no pressures to move the cast beyond the so-called bourgeoisie; and the drama is juxtaposed with long streams of interiority.
What is stunning about 'Sakina's Kiss' is its inclusion, despite its modest size, of multiple themes without seeming to get into any kind of labour. Rural land grabs and politics, Naxalism, male-female relations, cinema-fuelled urban masculinity, the difficulties of fatherhood, the cults of self-improvement, urban 'society' living, the awkwardness of encounters with police -- we find all these here, laced with a dafuqness that can only be called Kafkaesque, any gaps filled in by our current national natratives. Some oddities of middle-class life inevitably seep in. Like how, even during an emergency, a couple who owns two cars decides to travel to the village by bus.
The translation by Srinath Perur is perfect, even self-effacing, I would say, which is a quality that, I believe, it shares with Shanbhag's narrators. I can think of no higher compliment.
To me (and this took some reflection), the novel's unique ending is a signifier of the terrifying open-endedness of our contemporary reality, where Event, non-Event and Total Catastrophe are all clear possibilities -- possibilities that we can only see (because that's our only training) through the lens of corporate-y positivity.