An Atlas of Impossible Longing

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An Atlas of Impossible Longing Page 33

by Anuradha Roy


  The steamer hooted again, a little closer now, melancholy, hollow.

  I noticed irrelevant things: that her sari was the green of a tender banana leaf, that its border had flecks of lemon in it, that she had tiny, fish-shaped gold studs in her ears, that the same thin gold chain still rode over her collarbone and disappeared into her white blouse. I traced the chain with the tip of my finger.

  Our clothes were getting soaked in the grey river-bed, our feet were sinking in the mud, Bakul’s hair had come loose, one of her gold studs had slipped off, the number of staring children on the opposite bank had gone up from two to seven, and they were leaping up and down, laughing and pointing and shouting things we could not hear. I took in none of this.

  All I felt was that life had finally floated down the river and reached me.

  FINIS

  GLOSSARY

  aanchal

  one end of the sari, covering the shoulders and sometimes the head

  achaar

  pickle

  adivasis

  tribal people

  almirah

  cupboard

  aloo

  potato

  apsara

  divine beauty

  arre baap

  lit. “Oh father”, exclamation of alarm

  arre bhai

  lit. “Oh brother”, expression of affection

  Baba

  father

  Babu

  suffix added to men’s names to show respect

  bael

  Bengal quince, Aegle marmelos; a hard-shelled fruit

  Bahu

  daughter-in-law

  bathua

  a wild spinach

  beedi

  a cheap, strong smoke

  ber

  a wild berry

  bhoot

  ghost

  bhuttawala

  corn-seller

  Bibi

  affectionate Urdu term for a married woman

  biryani

  richly flavoured rice cooked with meat

  bonti

  a curved blade mounted on a wooden stand

  Boudi

  older brother’s wife

  Bouma

  daughter-in-law

  brinjal

  aubergine

  bulbul

  Indian bird with a sweet call

  Chacha/Chachi

  Uncle/Aunt

  chappal

  slippers

  charpoy

  rough, cheap string cot

  daal

  lentil curry

  Dada

  older brother

  Dadu

  grandfather

  dalna

  a light curry

  dekchi

  large cooking vessel

  deodar

  Cedrus deodara, a gigantic Himalayan cedar

  dhakai paratha

  paratha layered with egg and meat

  dhoti

  man’s unstitched lower garment

  Didi

  older sister

  doob

  a fine, soft grass

  duree

  rug

  Durga puja

  an important annual festival worshipping the goddess Durga, who vanquishes evil

  Durvasa Muni

  a mythological sage renowned for his temper

  gaandu

  a term of abuse

  Ganga

  the Ganges, one of India’s largest rivers, considered sacred

  Gangajal

  holy water from the Ganges

  garh

  fortress

  ghat

  steps to a river, bathing area

  ghee

  clarified butter

  goondas

  thugs

  gotra

  sub-caste

  grihaprastha

  one of the four traditional stages in a Hindu’s life: the householder stage

  gulli

  alleyway

  gulmohar

  Delonix regia, a tree which is covered in bright-orange blossoms in summer

  hakim

  practitioner of traditional Islamic medicine

  haraami

  bastard; term of abuse

  Hari, Hari

  exclamation, something like “Dear God!”

  havaldar

  low-ranking policeman

  huzoor

  lordship

  jamun

  Java plum

  jatra

  folk theatre

  jhaal muri

  spicy puffed rice

  jhinuk

  a spoon for feeding babies

  jhola

  cloth bag

  joota

  shoe

  juldi karo

  “Hurry up”

  junglee

  savage [noun and adj.], used as mild, often friendly, abuse

  kachnar

  Bauhinia variegata, a flowering tree with elegant purple or pink blossoms

  kajal

  kohl; black eye make-up used in the East

  kanthas

  thin, home-stitched quilts

  kashi

  large, flat-bottomed vessel with a low rim

  khadi

  rough, handspun cotton advocated by Mahatma Gandhi

  khansama

  cook and bearer

  khurpi

  humble garden tool for digging

  kukri

  curved Sikkimese knife

  kurta

  long, shirt-like garment

  kutcha

  unmetalled

  lakh

  one hundred thousand

  lungi

  unstitched lower garment worn by men

  Ma/Mataji

  mother

  machan

  a high, sheltered bamboo perch

  madhabilata

  Rangoon Creeper,

  Quisqualis indica maulvi

  muslim cleric

  mela

  fair/carnival

  memsahib

  originally, white woman; any upper-class woman

  mishti

  dessert; any kind of sweet dish

  mofussil

  small town

  moong

  green lentil

  moshai

  Sir; respectful form of address which can be used sarcastically

  mulmul

  soft, fine cotton

  muri

  puffed rice

  namaskar

  Indian greeting with joined palms and bowed head

  neem

  Margosa, Azadirachta indica, a tree with medicinal properties, whose twigs are used to clean teeth

  nullah

  drain/narrow canal

  paan

  an addictive concoction of betel leaf, areca nut, tobacco, and other condiments, usually consumed after meals

  pagli/pagla

  crazy girl/man

  pakora

  salty fritter

  papad

  poppadum

  paratha

  fried, unleavened flat-bread

  Parsi

  Zoroastrian

  payesh

  Bengali version of rice pudding

  peepal

  sacred fig, Ficus religiosa

  peon

  office boy

  phirni

  Mughal version of rice pudding

  poori

  fried, puffed bread

  puja

  ceremonial prayer

  pukur

  open water tank, often large and used for bathing

  purohitmoshai

  priest

  raat ki rani

  Cestrum nocturnum, Lady of the Night

  rezala

  rich meat curry

  riyaaz

  music practice

  rossogullas

  a spongy, syrupy sweet

  roti

  unleavened, wholewheat bread

  rui

  a kind of
carp

  sarangi

  a stringed musical instrument

  Saraswati puja

  yearly festival to invoke the Goddess of Learning

  semul

  silk cotton, Bombax ceiba, a towering, beautiful tree, almost leafless when it has its showy red flowers

  shehnai

  wind instrument usually played at weddings

  shingara

  deep-fried, triangular pastry filled with spicy vegetables or mincemeat

  sindoor

  red mark in the parting of a married Hindu woman’s hair

  stupa

  Buddhist monument

  supari

  areca nut

  swadeshi

  a phase of the nationalist movement in India when people were urged to reject foreign goods in favour of those locally manufactured. Clothes made from imported fabrics were thrown into public bonfires as a mark of protest.

  tanpura

  a stringed musical instrument

  Thak’ma

  slang for “thakuma”, i.e., grandmother

  theek hai

  “It’s alright”

  tonga

  horse-drawn carriage for hire

  tussar

  luxurious, traditionally woven silk

  vaid

  practitioner of traditional Hindu medicine

  zamindar

  landowner

  ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

  Christopher MacLehose – perfect reader, magnificent editor – has shown me all that it is possible for a publisher to be. His invisible ink is on every page.

  Ravi Dayal used his considerable powers of persuasion to make me show him a draft when I was too uncertain to part with it; his acerbic pencilling in the margins became my last conversation with him.

  Thanks to Shruti Debi for her persistence and her descriptions of crumbling old homes, some of which have entered the story; Laura Palmer for her reassuring combination of friendliness and efficiency; Nayanjot Lahiri for saving me from archaeological blunders; Katharina Bielenberg for being a last, super-fine sieve; Rohan D’Souza’s writings for teaching me about floods, and Rajdeep Mukherjee for all the thrillers. The tribal song is adapted from one in Verrier Elwin’s Leaves from the Jungle.

  Friends (especially the B.M.C. and Ladeez Sangeet) and family made this book possible by just being there. Among them, Myriam Bellehigue, Kristine Witt-Hansen, Uday Roy, Manishita Das, Arundhati Ray, Sharmi Roy, Kavita Sivaramakrishnan, and Angela Smith have tolerated various ill-timed demands on their affection, which included the reading of drafts. Mukul Kesavan, Ivan Hutnik, Sikha Ghosh, Thomas Abraham, Prateek Jalan, and Ram Guha provided encouragement and insider info, and Uday Kumar space and supplies.

  Thanks to Ma, Pa, and their bookshop for room in their lives and shelves; Chandra Dorai and Sukanta Chaudhuri for giving me the words; and Biscoot for making it clear that words are not anywhere as expressive as tail, eyes, and paw.

  My mother for taking stories I scribbled into schoolbooks as seriously as she did drafts of this novel, and for making me believe I would finish it by simply repeating that I would.

  In the end R – and not just for the optimal silences.

  An Atlas of Impossible Longing

  Reading Group Guide

  Introduction

  Set in the outskirts of a small town in Bengal in the mid-twentieth century, An Atlas of Impossible Longing is a multigenerational novel that weaves together a family’s story of romance, abandonment, forgiveness, and desire. Told in three powerful parts, the book explores what it means to live with the ghosts of the past, deal with an ever-changing present, and strive toward a blissful future that always seems just out of reach.

  Discussion Questions

  1 “The silence that to Amulya meant repletion locked Kananbala within a bell jar she felt she could not prise open for air” (page 16). The move from busy Calcutta to secluded Songarh is life changing for both Amulya and Kananbala, though in very different ways. Discuss how each is affected by the change.

  2. “He would look at [the plants] tenderly, wanting to stroke and pat them…. He had created a garden where there had been wilderness” (page 23). Describe Amulya’s relationship to nature throughout the book. How does he treat the plants in his garden? Similarly, how did you interpret his fascination with the young dancer’s Incarnata flower in the first chapter?

  3. “The lion’s roar was a secret she could not share with anybody else. The others slept on, oblivious to the throbbing wakefulness of the jungle” (page 19). Consider the roar of the lion that Kananbala hears periodically throughout the novel. Do you think Kananbala is hearing the roar of an actual lion, or do you think, in her madness, she is imagining the noise? What could the noise mean?

  4. Marriage can be both a blessing and a struggle, as the married couples in this novel exemplify. Review the various married couples involved in the story and discuss: Which marriage do you think works the best? Which is the unhealthiest? Why?

  5. “Bitterly she muttered, ‘God’s ways are strange, that He should give children to those who don’t care for them and leave me childless” (page 132). Manjula is seldom portrayed as a sympathetic character in the novel, yet her yearning for the child she can never have often gives her a certain vulnerability. How do you view Manjula? Does your opinion of her change over the course of the book?

  6. Kananbala and Mrs. Barnum share a bond from the moment Mrs. Barnum initiates the first wave. Does their relationship change after Kananbala witnesses Mr. Barnum’s murder? If so, how? Do you think Kananbala and Mrs. Barnum’s relationship at all contributes to Mrs. Barnum’s fondness for Bakul and Mukunda?

  7. The theme of man versus nature cuts through the novel, particularly when Bikash Babu laments the fall of his house to the rising river: “The arrogance,” he repeats. What emotions do you think he is feeling at that moment? At what point do you think he realizes that nature has truly won?

  8. Mukunda’s unknown caste gives him both trouble and freedom throughout the novel. In what ways does it help him? Hurt him? At any point, do you think he is treated unfairly because of his indefinite lineage?

  9. When Mukunda buys the house in Songarh, he believes he will finally be able to live a fulfilled life. Ultimately, what choices has he made by buying the house? What does he lose, and what does he gain?

  10. The pull of forbidden love is strong for many of the characters. Which characters resist this pull, and which seem to welcome it? Are any of them successful in refusing to succumb to forbidden love? If so, who?

  11. “If anyone in his family or neighbourhood got to know, there would be turmoil; Meera would certainly be ostracized, and perhaps he would be too” (page 139). Consider the strain put on the characters by societal expectations. Do you think her certain exclusion from society is the only reason Meera runs from her attraction to Nirmal?

  12. The above quote suggests a double standard for women and men in these types of situations; Meera will “certainly be ostracized,” while Nirmal may only “perhaps” suffer society’s disdain. How is this double standard a reflection of society, and what is your reaction to it? Do you see a double standard for women and men elsewhere in the novel?

  13. Noorie the Parrot plays a small yet significant role in the book and in the hearts of those who closely encounter her. What does she represent for Mukunda, the man who threatens to make “parrot stew” of her? To his wife, who sets the bird free to fend for itself? For Chacha and Chachi, who return to Calcutta to find that Noorie is no longer there?

  14. After finishing the book, turn back to the beginning and reread the opening Prologue. Discuss: How has your interpretation of the opening paragraphs changed? Does the Prologue evoke different emotions now that you are more acquainted with the house and the river?

  15. During the massive displacement of the Indian Partition, more than 100,000 people died. Do you see ways in which these events mirror other events taking place in the world today?

  Reading Grou
p Enhancers

  1. With the members of your reading group, create a family tree for the characters in the novel. You can use this diagram as a resource during your discussion.

  2. Mukunda fondly remembers Chacha’s inability to buy anything but books when he comes into a bit of spare money. Chacha appreciates everything from the “beautiful engraving on the title page” to the smell of the pages of a secondhand book. Take a trip to a bookstore or secondhand book sale in your community as Chacha might have done.

  3. Meera’s favorite hobby is taking care of the young pups she finds by the Songarh ruin. She also enjoys sketching them, the ruin, and the people she loves. Find a person, place, or animal that interests you and sketch that subject in two ways: how the subject truly looks—like Nirmal would request if you were sketching the ruin—and how the subject makes you feel.

 

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