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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, December 17, 2000 |
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First Impression
THIS is a double action book, two stories overlapping in time,
set in two different periods with different sets of characters.
But their lives are intertwined because each set is in the same
pursuit. That of the Incan idol, that is made of a strange
compound not found on earth. One wants it for reasons of
religion, death and destruction, the other to be the first to
become a super power. However there are some "doors that are
meant to remain unopened," as the blurb for the book announces.
And so when Professor William Race, a linguist is suddenly called
upon by the U.S. Army to try and translate an old Incan memoir
that could lead them to the exact location of the idol, little
does he know what is in store for him. Before he can blink an
eyelid, he is whisked off as an appendage on the high-powered
mission to the forgotten citadel of Vilafor where the idol is
said to have been kept. As Race familiarises himself with the
long forgotten text, written by a Franciscan priest, he finds
sudden similarities in the present day situation. Horror on
horror climaxes, as the special mission sets out to look for the
idol.
Meanwhile, Race, confronted with not only the earlier version of
events that led to the Incan idol, but also the present day
machinations of the Germans (who incidentally are also after the
idol), finds himself being drawn deeper and deeper into a role
that he really does not relish. As Race comes to realise that his
position is quite similar to the monk of yesteryears who saved
the idol from destruction, he finds it is too late to draw back.
The mission leads Race and his companions to a mysterious stone
temple hidden in the foothills of the Andes, a carefully
contrived sanctuary seething with terror and menace. But not one
of them is prepared for the onslaught that follows when the
silence of the temple is breached.
Temple, Matthew Reilly, Pan, œ5.99.
SOME bonds are made to be broken. But young Meggie Singh does not
know that till she is ready to fall off the edge with her father
in his desperately mad quest for light. He who is the "Professor
of Light" - that charming, somewhat dishevelled man, who, with
his soft, mesmeric, lilting tones can actually hypnotise an
audience into listening to his theories. Professor Singh is
Meggie's father who shapes her childhood, her thoughts and her
ideas in his own mould, so that as she grows older Meggie is able
to potentially realise what it is she has to ask him, for him to
be able to carry on in singleminded concentration.
But what she has not bargained for is the unexpected presence of
people who may or may not be able to so idolise her father. One
of them being her mother, who feels left out, peeved and lost in
her relationship with her husband. Meggie watches as chapter
after chapter of her parents non-marriage unfolds in various
different sequences before her eyes.
Sometimes she is the traitor, sometimes the jealous spectator.
But each time she forgives her father because she believes that
eventually he will find the answer that he has been looking for
all these years.
With a family scattered all over India, Guyana and America,
Meggie is also brought up on a diet rich with superstition,
folklore and most of all, family takes, tales that beckon back
into the family fold. Such is the power of persuasion, that even
Meggie cannot help but feel the pull.
As meggie prays and hopes for a happy family, for her father to
eventually write the book that he has been working on, she
realises how much is at stake. Eventually her father looses
tracks and finally one day, follows the family tradition, turning
himself into an object of ridicule rather than respect. Marina
Budhos, has written a beautiful book - a story about how some
little girls have to eventually grow up and snap the bond because
growing up can also mean growing apart. This is a must-read book,
one to be read slowly, savoured to the last page, waiting to fall
over the precipe.
The Professor of Light, Marina Budhos, IndiaInk, Rs. 250.
AS always, Lee Siegel trapezes between reality and illusion. But
after reading his stunning Love in a Dead Language, this book on
magic pales into ordinariness. So strong is Siegel's desire to
intertwine texts, to prove the real, to call off the fake and to
be able to build an interesting venture, that he has lost track
of his goal.
This is the story, then, of impoverished Indian magicians, who
practice their art seductively, desperately seeking maya even
while publicly denouncing it. There is no respectability left in
the trade and Siegel, who encounters not only Muslim street
magicians in Shadipur, Delhi, but also P. C. Sorcar, finds
himself somewhat outwitted by the fictious Prof. M. T. Bannerji.
Even as Siegel's narration moves from present to past, to past
imperfect, he keeps no formulas for guessing. The plot hinges on
fiction, reality, history, travel and a little bit of everything
else. There is of course loads of deception, not unlike the
magicians who perfect the art of creating deception into a
universal truth. However for Siegel, unfortunately, the bunny
refuses to pop out of the hat despite the magic wand.
Net of magic, Lee Siegel, Harper Collins, Rs. 295.
THESE are eternal classics. The new publications of Ramayana,
Bhagvad Gita and the Mahabharata are welcome. Finally younger
children get to read their classics in easy to understand
language and without the glaring omission that often made for
incomplete and headless stories. The epics are well illustrated
and colourful enough to captivate the attention of younger
children, while the text can be read by any age group. It is
never an easy job to condense epics of this size, specially
without losing focus of the main story. Har Anand publishers have
managed to put together a neat and well presented text which will
attract all age groups.
Ramayana, Bhagvad Gita, Mahabharata, Har Anand, Rs. 150 each.
SUCHITRA BEHAL
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