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The Walls of Delhi: Three Stories

by Uday Prakash

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454562,378 (4.14)35
A street sweeper discovers a cache of black market money and escapes to see the Taj Mahal with his underage mistress; an Untouchable races to reclaim his life that's been stolen by an upper-caste identity thief; a slum baby's head gets bigger and bigger as he gets smarter and smarter, while his family tries to find a cure. One of India's most original and audacious writers, Uday Prakash, weaves three tales of living and surviving in today's globalized India. In his stories, Prakash portrays realities about caste and class with an authenticity absent in most English-language fiction about South Asia. Sharply political but free of heavy handedness.… (more)
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This is a translation of three short stories of the Hindi author Uday Prakash by Jason Grunebaum. The central theme of these stories is highlight the various injustices and the hardships faced by the lower classes in India.

In the first story "The walls of Delhi" , a sweeper finds counterfeit currency hidden in the wall of a gymnasium where he goes cleaning everyday. He enjoys his wealth for some time till the system catches up with him.

Uday Prakash's most famous story, "Mohandas" deals with a low caste man with no connections,who fails to get employment in a coal mine after he aces the entrance exam. Later on he finds out that some other person has secured the same job using his certificates and his identity. He struggles to bring this fact to the authorities on various levels but is defeated by corruption every time.

The last story "Mangosil" deals with a couple who live in poverty and after having several abortions give birth to a kid with a large head (meningocele). After the doctors have declared that the kid will not survive beyond two years, the kid lives on and becomes peculiar in his ways. The story ends unexpectedly and has a sci-fi component.

I'm a reader who knows both Hindi and English. When I read this book I can appreciate the things which are lost in translation. The author also has a tendency to go off on a tangent. But overall it's a nice if sometimes a disturbing read. ( )
  mausergem | Jan 29, 2015 |
Although all three stories in this collection are somewhat or very depressing, they are written with a characteristic verve and have enough humor so that reading them is not an unpleasant experience. Prakash looks at various people living on the brink of poverty in and around Delhi as they come up against injustice and corruption, occasionally have a bit of luck, and try to get on with their lives. He has a loose, conversational way of narrating that I quite liked and also takes time to develop the lives and worlds of his characters – the main plots often wouldn’t start for a number of pages.

The first story, “The Walls of Delhi”, opens with a look at a range of food cart operators hawking their wares and scraping by, noting that occasionally one of the regulars would disappear and never be heard from again. One such disappearance, the narrator tells us, was Ramnivas Pasiya. An unhappily married janitor, Ramnivas finds his life turned around when he discovers some dirty money at his job one day. He spoils his mistress and gives his family a better life, but unfortunately, his luck doesn’t last. The second story is about “Mohandas”, who, despite his low caste status, is extremely intelligent and graduated with high marks. Unfortunately, he cannot find work since he has no connections and no money to bribe his way. His fight against the system becomes increasingly precarious. In the last story, “Mangosil”, a poor couple, Chandrakant and Shobha, have a happy marriage but no children until they have Suri, who has a dangerously oversized head and a preternatural intelligence.

There’s some meandering in all of the stories and I really liked that here. Ramnivas isn’t the most sympathetic character, but I loved reading the commentary from the food sellers and how he is suddenly flooded with family members upon becoming wealthy. “Mohandas” was a bit Kafka-esque, in that a large portion of the plot has Mohandas trying to prove that he is really Mohandas when someone else steals his stellar academic credentials (leading him to question his own identity). It also reminded me of some more straightforward tales of good men going to desperate lengths for justice, as in “Michael Kohlhaas” by Heinrich von Kleist. The narrator intrudes a lot in this story – he claims to know Mohandas, makes overt comparisons to Gandhi, and occasionally has asides where he describes what’s going on in the world, with various examples of corruption in India. Even though “Mohandas” is a pretty unhappy story, there is enough humor and glimpses of everyday life so that it doesn’t feel like series of miserable events. “Mangosil” isn’t just about a sick and precocious child – the author describes Shobha’s horrific first marriage, the couple’s happy life in a slum, the various changes to the family, and the gentrification and inequality throughout Delhi that affects Shobha and Chandrakant as well as the narrator. I would be happy to read more by Prakash and would recommend this collection. ( )
3 vote DieFledermaus | Jan 15, 2015 |
What is the colour of fear? Is it the colour of dirt, or of stone? Is it yellow, charcoal? Or the colour of ash left over from a burning coal – ash that coats the coal still glowing red-hot, that still has its heat! Or a colour that masks a terrifying silence behind it? A small tear that exposes a frightful scream suspended behind.Have you ever seen the bloodshot, dying eyes of a fish thrown from an ocean or a river, onto a sandy bank or shore? That’s the colour.

The Walls of Delhi is a collection of three stories originally written by Uday Prakash in Hindi and translated into English by Jason Grunebaum. In the title story The Walls of Delhi, a sweeper discovers a cache of black money and escapes to see the Taj Mahal with his underage mistress. In the story Mohandas, a lower caste man struggles to reclaim his identity stolen by an upper caste identity thief. In Mangosil, a baby is born to an elderly couple with a rare disease in which the baby’s head gets bigger and bigger as he gets smarter and smarter, while his poverty stricken family struggles for a cure.

Read the complete review at http://www.thebookoutline.com/2013/02/book-review-walls-of-delhi.html ( )
  theBookOutline | Feb 10, 2013 |
You ought to know the truth: there are only two reasons lives like ours are stamped out. One: our lives are left over as proof of past and present sins and crimes against castes, races, cultures; they always want to keep this as hidden as they can. Two: our lives get in the way of the enterprising city, or act as a road bump in the master plan of a country that thinks of itself as a big player on the world stage. Our very humanity threatens to reveal the wicked culture of money and means as something suspect and unlovely. That's why whenever civilizations once developing, now on the brink of prosperity, decide to embark on a program of 'beautification', they try to root out such lives, the same way the mess on the floor is swept outside.

Uday Prakash is one of India's most highly respected writers, due to his rich stories of modern life and his willingness to describe the corruption and caste prejudice that exists there. However, his career has been marked by harassment by government officials, which has caused him to be fired from numerous jobs and to become a jack of many trades in order to feed his family. He was born in the state of Madhya Pradesh in 1951, to a family of village landlords. After the premature deaths of his parents he obtained a university degree in Sagar, Madhya Pradesh, and taught comparative literature and Hindi at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi, where he has resided since 1975.

In the words of Jason Grunebaum, the narrator of this book, "In many of his stories, Uday Prakash shows how those who dare to dissent against a suffocating system are punished. But with his biting satire and delightful narrative detours he also demonstrates how humor and compassion ultimately provide the best means to fight back and escape."

The Walls of Delhi consists of three short stories, all set in Delhi at the end of the 20th and the beginning of the 21st century, about a person struggling against poverty and corruption, each one told through the eyes of a narrator that knows him well. In "The Walls of Delhi", Ramnivas Pasiya is a lower caste emigrant to Delhi who is barely able to support his young family as a part-time sanitation worker, in a neighborhood filled with street vendors, prostitutes and smackheads. One of his jobs is to clean a fitness club where wealthy Hindis go to lose weight, while the poor that surround them are engaged in a daily struggle to find sufficient food for the day. "Mohandas" describes the life of Mohandas Viswakarma, who becomes the first person from his village to obtain a university degree and graduates second in his class, yet finds that the expected pathways to success are closed to him, as less educated and talented men with personal connections or the ability to bribe officials obtain employment ahead of him. Finally, "Mangosil" is about a young boy from a poor family cursed with seven prior miscarriages, who is born healthy but experiences massive and painful enlargement of his head in proportion to his body, while simultaneously developing unusual wisdom and intelligence. Doctors are willing to diagnose and treat him, but their fees are beyond the means of his parents.

These three stories are all suffused with both tragedy and humor, which prevents this book from being an overly depressing one, though it isn't a light or frivolous read. The narrator or characters make frequent and poignant comments about Indian society and its caste prejudice and rampant corruption that flow smoothly within each story. I could not put this book down once I started it, and I finished it in one sitting. The Walls of Delhi is a masterful book about modern India, which is a far better book than The White Tiger, Aravind Adiga's Booker Prize winning novel, and it deserves to be widely read and appreciated. ( )
12 vote kidzdoc | Jan 22, 2013 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
Uday Prakashprimary authorall editionscalculated
Grunebaum, JasonTranslatorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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Epigraph
This story's really just a front for the secret I want to tell you — a secret hidden behind the story. Why? Well, what do you call what reaches your ears? Rumours, rumours, disguised as facts, but nothing but rumours. That's how things are, I'm afraid — like the appearance that I might disappear at any moment. Gone in my own time.
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The paan shop leads to the opening of a tunnel full of the creatures of the city, and the tears and spit of a fakir.
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A street sweeper discovers a cache of black market money and escapes to see the Taj Mahal with his underage mistress; an Untouchable races to reclaim his life that's been stolen by an upper-caste identity thief; a slum baby's head gets bigger and bigger as he gets smarter and smarter, while his family tries to find a cure. One of India's most original and audacious writers, Uday Prakash, weaves three tales of living and surviving in today's globalized India. In his stories, Prakash portrays realities about caste and class with an authenticity absent in most English-language fiction about South Asia. Sharply political but free of heavy handedness.

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