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When eagles dare
FOR a first time author, The Aerie and the Swamp is quite an
achievement as it leaves the reader with a refreshing sense of
possibility. However, the length of the book remains daunting as
one wades through lumbering pages of prose which could have been
made tighter, and consequently more reader-friendly.
The title of this book is also a metaphor for the city of Mumbai,
says the author in her prologue, "that can be extended to depict
the transformation of India in the last 50 years". In India, the
land of phenomenal contrasts, there are "islands of affluence"
coexisting with "seas of abject poverty" ... The "aerie", in the
author's words, represents "Something to aspire to" while the
swamp represents "something to transcend, to overcome, to rise
above - as eagles do, soaring high ... in the sky with ...
unlimited vistas". The metaphor of the eagle soaring upwards is
carried forward in the course of the book as the chapter titles
suggest. The aerie stands for freedom and the struggle of man to
break free from the swamp of entrapment is the underlying theme
of the book. Another constant motif running through the narrative
is insecurity and does this search for security end in entrapment
in the swamp? The novel revolves around the lives of four
characters who are setting out to find their place in the world
and by the end of 564 pages we discover along with them that
reaching for the aerie may very well be like chasing a mirage
while the swamp below becomes very real and very threatening.
Nevertheless Nitya, Ravi, Aasha and Fateh manage to get a glimpse
of the life they would eventually want for themselves and the
story ends on a note of acceptance sans struggle.
The novel is divided into seven parts, complete with a prologue
and an epilogue. In the course of this elaborately crafted novel,
the author asks certain provocative questions on issues which
matter. The arranged marriages in India, particularly in Syrian
Christian and the Rajasthani communities are described in close
and sympathetic detail. It is as if the author has deeply felt
the pangs of the young bride about to be sent off with an
unfamiliar stranger, leaving behind everything she has called her
own. Fateh's marriage of convenience to Shefali is likewise
portrayed with sensitivity as an inevitable step in his so-called
advancement in life. Highly individualistic and rational Aasha
eventually reciprocates Ravi's affection only to be violently
turned down and discarded for a trivial reason. There is not much
sense in asking why people behave as they do in certain
situations and the wheel turns a full circle until the
protagonists meet once more and come to terms with themselves.
Nitya realises her potential as a designer and rediscovers her
love for Fateh who is disillusioned with the material success he
has achieved. Ravi realises that his triumphant progress up the
corporate ladder becomes meaningless without love and his
personal happiness is in precarious balance until Nitya decides
to abide by her sense of loyalty and commitment.
From the beginning we have Aleykutty's comments which act like
the Greek chorus explaining, recalling and sometimes predicting
the nature of man and his possible reactions. The submerged story
of Aleykutty who had suffered in the hands of a tyrannical
mother-in law, allowing a considerable amount of space for her
own daughter-in law Nitya eventually helps the latter to break
out of her claustrophobic familial bonds. We get a glimpse of the
NRI syndrome when Aasha arrives with her fatherless son to find
her roots once more. The four protagonists realise that to put
back the clock is well nigh impossible and there is in reality no
choice left for them but to trudge back on the familiar road. But
travelling so far had taught them a few things which mattered:
there is a vision at a distance if they tried hard to see and in
that process they learn to value love and compassion, which come
from seeing life as a whole.
One would like to describe the book as a sustained meditation on
the nature of belief, ritual, business, architecture, love and
marriage. However, despite the fact that the author has the
capacity to touch upon the grief and pain which lie beneath our
daily experience, the novel does not succeed in involving the
reader. The story moves in and out of Kerala, Bombay, Rajasthan
and the U.S. and the time span during which the events take place
is somewhere between early 1980s to the new millennium. While
admiring the skill with which the various strands are woven
together, emotional participation remains minimal on the part of
the reader. Perhaps the "slice of life" illusion of the story's
theme makes the whole exercise flat. At the end of the story as
Aasha returns to the U.S., the reader is left with an inescapable
sense of loss and is not quite convinced of the ethereal nature
of the promised vision.
The author's prose is by no means contrived but we are not swept
away anytime by the sheer interest of the narrative. Priyamvada
Kuriyan has widely travelled all over India and this has enabled
her to delineate the setting of the novel with authenticity. Her
family, we are told, has an abiding passion for literature and
music and the celebrity author Arundathi Roy is a second cousin.
Ms. Kuriyan's interests in Communications and Strategic
Management and experience as a teacher of Managerial
Communication have provided the novel its purpose, its muscle and
perhaps its strength. Ms. Kuriyan is no mere entertainer using
words as an art form but a writer who has used her ingenuity to
the full while expressing her firm opinions on issues which
matter.
PREMA SRINIVASAN
The Aerie and The Swamp,
Elizabath Priyamvada Kuriyan, Kalpa Vriksha Books, 2000, p. 572,
Rs. 395.
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