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Love and Longing in Bombay
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Group Book Reads > Love and Longing in Bombay - March Group Read

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message 1: by Anbu (new)

Anbu (anbutheone) | 4469 comments "This book is a collection of inter connected stories. In these stories, Chandra has covered the gamut of genres: there is a ghost story, a love story, a murder mystery, and a crime story, each tale joined to the others by the voice of the elusive narrator" the description in GR says so. :)

Aravind, stage set for you to lead your first group read.. Take it up from here.. :)


dely | 5485 comments I am ready, have already the book.


message 3: by Ahtims (new)

Ahtims (embeddedinbooks) | 47116 comments Mod
am not going to join in - I dont intend to buy the book (unless you all give a raving review and I end up spending my hard earned moolah, but with enjoyable results, just like I did with "Solo"


Aravind P | 1366 comments Sorry for being late here..I have just started off with 'Dharma'.


message 5: by Anjali (new)

Anjali | 196 comments i dont think i want to join in as i do not intend to read this book unless i get 4 star reviews from you guys...


Aravind P | 1366 comments It is a collection of 5 short stories, so I guess overall rating would be dodgy. We can try putting the ratings for individual stories in this discussion page I guess...


message 7: by Parikhit (last edited Mar 02, 2012 10:49PM) (new)

Parikhit | 3999 comments Not participating either. The name puts me off!


dely | 5485 comments Till now I have read the first two stories, Dharma and Shakti.
They are both an ok read, nothing special. They are not bad and have also a slow pace but till now nothing remains inside me, they don't "touch" me, they don't communicate me anything.


message 9: by Aravind (last edited Mar 02, 2012 09:39AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Aravind P | 1366 comments Finished the first one. It didn't have anything Bombayish in it. The story could have been set anywhere. Story was kind of interesting and I should say I liked. It is about a man who is retiring to his family home that now appears haunted by something that, as it proceeded, I felt he doesn't want to remember. There is something moving in the narration, of that of guilt and nightmares that the story tries to unravel. I expected something more deep still, to be honest.


message 10: by dely (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments But at the end (view spoiler)


message 11: by Aravind (last edited Mar 02, 2012 12:00PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Aravind P | 1366 comments dely wrote: "But at the end [spoilers removed]"

(view spoiler)


message 12: by dely (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments Aravind wrote: "[spoilers removed]
..."


Yes, perhaps to fulfill his dharma he had to make peace with himself (view spoiler).
You are right, Chandra could have been more deep; me too I would have appreciated more.


message 13: by dely (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments I have finished the third story: Kama :/

Didn't liked it at all, would give 1 star to this story.
First because it is a thriller-mystery and I don't like this genre. But the worst thing is that there is (view spoiler)


message 14: by Aravind (last edited Mar 03, 2012 08:29AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Aravind P | 1366 comments I have just started that...I was thinking about the Shakti part. (view spoiler)


Aravind P | 1366 comments First because it is a thriller-mystery and I don't like this genre.

:(...

I love detective thrillers...hope this is a good one.


message 16: by dely (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments Aravind wrote: "I have just started that...I was thinking about the Shakti part. [spoilers removed]"

I have interpreted in this way: (view spoiler)


message 17: by dely (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments I have read the fourth story: artha. It was again an ok read, not bad but nothing special.

But I don't understand: if the purushartha are: artha, kama, dharma and moksha why Chandra didn't write a story about moksha but one about shanti? Perhaps because moksha is difficult to reach and so "normal" persons should be glad also reaching "only" a peaceful life (I have written only quoted because I think it is very difficult to reach peace and serenity in life)? I can understand the story about shakti because everything we do we have to use our shakti, our energy (to work, to love, to follow the path of dharma...); but why shanti and not moksha?

I hope to find the answer in the last story, if there is an answer; perhaps Chandra has written this book without thinking about the purushartha.


message 18: by Ahtims (new)

Ahtims (embeddedinbooks) | 47116 comments Mod
good, I wont buy this book now.


message 19: by dely (last edited Mar 04, 2012 02:20PM) (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments I have read also the fifth story: shanti. So I have finished the book.
From one side this story was nice (view spoiler)

In my edition, at the end (and I have seen it only now finishing the book :/) there is a short part dedicated to the explanation of the purushartha and there is written that with moksha we reach shanti. I was sure this two words had different meanings and could not be synonyms but it seems that once we reach moksha we will have Peace. So now I know why the last story is entitled "shanti" and not moksha.


message 20: by Aravind (last edited Mar 04, 2012 03:46PM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Aravind P | 1366 comments dely wrote: "I have finished the third story: Kama :/

Didn't liked it at all, would give 1 star to this story.
First because it is a thriller-mystery and I don't like this genre. But the worst thing is that t..."


I actually liked this one more than the other two. Mainly because of the narration and clear cut characterisation. (view spoiler)

So far I am impressed with his narratives and characterisation. It is more like a literary fiction, where situations and characters are elaborated instead of the plot which is left on its own. I mean, we feel those characters very realistically now I suppose and their strength and weakness. I am able to draw some similarities with the style of Julian Barnes.

To me, I am unable to see Bombay in the stories, and that is what I expected foremost. The stories so far covers only a certain class of the city whilst the city is known for its working class more than the others. He mentions the places, little bit of landscapes and weather but still it is not bringing the pulse of that city into the stories, I felt.

Regarding the historical bits, so far I didn't feel the significance of them either, even symbolically.

I am a bit slow as I am working on night shifts and have just started 'Artha'. Liked your explaination on 'Shakti'.


message 21: by dely (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments Aravind wrote: "I actually liked this one more than the other two. Mainly because of the narration and clear cut characterisation. (view spoiler)"


This one is the one I liked the less :D
Though I understood that (view spoiler)

I think for me the problem is also the translation. I had already read Red Earth and Pouring Rain and so I know that Chandra uses a good language, he knows how to hold the reader's attention and I liked his way of writing. I have looked on the two books and they have different translators. In Love and Longing I had to re-read some parts because I could not understand who the subject of the sentence was. And this is surely a problem of the translation.

Don't search for Bombay in this book, there are only some places and nothing more.


Aravind P | 1366 comments dely wrote: "Aravind wrote: "I actually liked this one more than the other two. Mainly because of the narration and clear cut characterisation. (view spoiler)"


This one is the one I liked the less :D
Though I..."


I finished ARTHA and that is till now the best I have read and this one had plenty of Bombay in it, a kind of right mixture. Bombay used to called the city of dreams. People come there hoping for prosperity and they find their dreams broken by its own vanity. That is the drama of the lives, like when their resolve turn bitter, love more fierce and longing more painful, gives a better glimpse of psyche of the city.
I am understanding the significance of titles better now. In all the stories here, it is about love and longing centered around the human behavior and its consequences. While I was reading each of the stories, I could get some cultural idiosynchracies that I might have come across in some Indian movies. Chandra narrated the first 3 in a kind of noirish, with plenty of bitterness or resentment in the narratives, and those weren't that poetic so you won't feel a beauty in the story which I guess is fine as far as the theme concerned is darker. The 'Artha', I felt, was more poetic, it was funny and sad as well.

Dely, I can understand, if translation is not up to the mark then it ruins the pleasure. On the back of that, William Weaver used to be the translator for most of the good Italian works that I have read(Italo Calvino, Umberto Eco etc) heard he has gone sick and won't be doing anymore translations :(.

I am about to start the last one...


message 23: by dely (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments Reading your opinions about the book let me suppose that I was not able to understand what Chandra wanted to tell to the reader; as if there is something I couldn't catch. It is also true that I don't know Bombay and I have never watched an Indian movie (and the book is full of hints and references to the movies) and so I have missed a lot.
I was focused to find in the stories a deepening of the titles, anything philosophical/spiritual, and so I was not able to see if there was also something else. Now that you point it out, it's true, in every story there is love (for a brother, for a child, for a woman/man, the country...) but I was looking for something else and so probably I have missed all the rest :/


Aravind P | 1366 comments dely wrote: "Reading your opinions about the book let me suppose that I was not able to understand what Chandra wanted to tell to the reader; as if there is something I couldn't catch. It is also true that I do..."

Kunal too had voted for this book, I am hoping that he would be having some interesting views to share...


message 25: by dely (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments Aravind wrote: "Kunal too had voted for this book, I am hoping that he would be having some interesting views to share... "

I hope it too.


message 26: by Aravind (last edited Mar 06, 2012 07:59AM) (new) - rated it 4 stars

Aravind P | 1366 comments Finished the book. The last one was beautiful. (view spoiler) I liked the last 3 stories a lot. Dharma is the one I liked the least of the lot, even in that (view spoiler). Shakti also didn't hit my chord well, though Ganga's episode was really good.

My rating:
Dharma - ***
Shakti - ***
Kama - ****
Artha - ****
Shanti - ****


message 27: by dely (last edited Mar 06, 2012 02:05PM) (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments If you liked the last one then you must absolutely read Vikram Chandra's Red Earth and Pouring Rain. I have liked this one more than Love and Longing. It is a story full of little stories, very good (except for the ending, for me it was disappointing). Though I gave also to Red Earth only 2 stars it is, in my opinion, better than Love and Longing. I should change the rating and give 3 stars to Red Earth.

Love and Longing is not a bad book but I am sure Chandra could have done better above all deepening the stories.
I have also to read Sacred Games and I have read that the main character will be Sartaj. I have bought it without reading the plot and I hope it will not be a thriller/mystery.

My rating:

dharma: **
shakti: ***
kama: *
artha: **
shanti: ***


message 28: by Richard (last edited Mar 17, 2012 08:27PM) (new) - rated it 3 stars

Richard | 34 comments I enjoyed this book quite a lot, however there were some things that startled me about it. I was somewhat shocked at the prominence of erotica in some of the stories although perhaps I should not have been. (I don't want to be any more explicit--if you'll pardon my word choice--lest it tempt me into a spoiler.)

In general, Chandra has protagonists who are quite introspective, and he seems to approach his characters and stories in a way that at first seems somehow detached, but ends up being intense. For example, in "Dharma" the reader meets Jago Antia, someone who is military, rigid and in tight control of himself; by the end one discovers a man whose life is full of pain and tragedy. Similarly, the reader comes to empathize with the hurt and fragility of Sartaj ("Kama"), Iqbal ("Artha") and Shiv ("Shanti"). For myself, though, this is less true of Sheila in "Shakti" and I wonder if that's because Chandra was just indulging in a cutting satire of social climbers or because he is less adept at portraying female protagonists.

A theme which seems to run through all the stories is that of a quest to be achieved or a mystery to be solved, in other words, a journey toward understanding.


message 29: by dely (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments Richard wrote: "A theme which seems to run through all the stories is that of a quest to be achieved or a mystery to be solved, in other words, a journey toward understanding. "


Yes, it is.
I don't know if you know a little bit of Hindu philosophy but the book speaks about the purushartha: targets that a person must reach in order to live happily, satisfied, a fulfilled life.
Dharma: the duty that everybody of us has and must follow. Everybody has his dharma, he must find out which it is and follow this path.
Artha: work, profit. Everybody of us must work in order to mantain himself, his family.
Kama: love. Not only sentimental love but also passional, carnal love. A person must search fulfillment also in this in order to have a satisfied life.
Shanti: peace (though the last purushartha is called moksha, liberation from reincarnation). Every person must live in order to achieve liberation, peace, moksha.
Shakti: energy. This is not a purushartha but without energy there is no action so people can't follow the path of dharma, they can't work, they can't love and they can't reach moksha. Everything is energy and shakti is a strong female energy (she is also worshiped like a goddess in Shaktism). I am sure that Chandra put it in the purusharta because without energy there can't be nothing, everything is energy.


Richard | 34 comments Dely, Thank you for that explanation. I know a little about Hinduism, having read a few sacred texts (in English translation) and some basic introductory material. But I am by no means an expert. This gives me a much better idea of how the stories are connected.


message 31: by dely (new) - rated it 2 stars

dely | 5485 comments You're welcome.
Me neither are an expert! I know only a few things.


message 32: by Shriya (new)

Shriya I just read above this book is a part of some series? So that means I can not just purchase Love and Longing in Bombay alone?!

How much history content?
Is it simple?
Does it get to the point?


Aravind P | 1366 comments Shriya wrote: "I just read above this book is a part of some series? So that means I can not just purchase Love and Longing in Bombay alone?!

How much history content?
Is it simple?
Does it get to the point?"


No. It is a collection of short stories. One of the stories have some characters from his another novel 'Sacred Games'.
It doesn't have any historical bits in it. In couple of stories I didn't feel it was happening in Bombay either.


message 34: by Shriya (new)

Shriya Um ok so it has nothing related to Bombay as such? I am creating a huge collection of Bombay/Mumbai related stories either set or about, this one is in that list..


Aravind P | 1366 comments Shriya wrote: "Um ok so it has nothing related to Bombay as such? I am creating a huge collection of Bombay/Mumbai related stories either set or about, this one is in that list.."

The book says it is set in Bombay :)

shakti
kama
artha

These 3 gives a kind of feel that it is in Bombay. While the others could be any metropolitan city. I mean, all these stories are quite dramatic and gives a feel of maybe watching a good Bollywood movie so that sometimes gives a feel that it might be Bombay/Mumbai(I mean really different movies like say Dobhi ghat, Shaitan or Mumbai meri jaan etc).


message 36: by Shriya (new)

Shriya Okay, so which one to start first?


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