Sunday, December 30, 2018

35 Good Books I Read In 2018






There There – A Spellbinding Exploration of Native American Identity



“They took everything and ground it down to dust as fine as gunpowder, they fired their guns into the air in victory and the strays flew out into the nothingness of histories written wrong and meant to be forgotten. Stray bullets and consequences are landing on our unsuspecting bodies even now.”

Tommy Orange’s bracing debut novel There There (published June 2018) sets to reclaim the modern ‘Indian’ narrative (or to use the politically correct term ‘Native American’), which has been hijacked by white historians’ sanitized, faux-heroic tales and Hollywood’s binary portrayal of the persecuted Natives as either stoic side-kicks or dreadful savages. Not that Mr. Orange in this process of reclamation through stories perfectly delineates the so-called ‘Indianness’. If anything, the author’s reflection on ‘being Indian’ (using overlapping stories of 12 different characters) is punctuated with a sense of bewilderment and obscurity. “Don’t ever let anyone tell you what being Indian means. Too many of us died to get just a little bit of us here, right now, right in this kitchen”, a grandmother tells her teenage grandson in the novel, which (as with any fraught identities) echoes ambivalent feelings (scattered throughout the narration) when it comes to defining the Native Americans’ plight in the ‘land of dreams’.

There There opens with a devastating prologue which laments the blood-soaked history of Indians made possible by the Western invaders. The prologue sharply remarks how these maimed, dispersed, mocked, cheated, exiled, and neglected people were forced to define and re-define their identities for centuries amidst the relentless assault waged by the winners’ wrongful historical accounts. Orange’s righteous fury glows throughout this essay, referencing to white America’s plethora of atrocities and subjugation tactics directed towards the continent’s indigenous population.  Then the book jumps to introducing us a group of loosely connected Native American residents from Oakland, California. This largest cast of Indians – young and old, poor and middle-class, male and female, naïve and worldly, alcoholics and master-degree holders – are all preparing (for various reasons) for the national powwow at the Oakland Coliseum. The fates of these diverse voices gradually converge at the single point of Oakland powwow. The powwow of 21st century America itself represents the ambivalent, evasive identity of an ‘Indian’, while the characters struggle with ways to see themselves as an ‘authentic Indian’.

Orange’s narrative is free from mythologization, sentimentality, stereotypes, and one-note sadness. On the outset, the characters’ lives are beset with familiar issues (inflicted upon universally among indigenous population by the victorious colonial powers) like alcoholism, unemployment, underemployment, criminality, depression, and alienation. But the way Orange empathetically reflects on these problems brilliantly touches upon the pain of a history and a community, long suppressed by falsehoods. The novel’s primarily introduced character Tony Loneman has fetal alcohol syndrome (due to his pregnant mother’s drinking), which he calls ‘Drome’. “It’s the way history lands on a face” Orange writes, absorbingly relating the bitterness of the present with the subjugation of the past. Thomas Frank is a half-white, half-Indian character, who struggles to reconcile with his dual identity. The author sharply draws this inner conflict like this: “You’re from a people who took and took and took and took. And from a people taken”.

Tommy Orange

Dene Oxedene, who tries to honor his ethnicity and his late-uncle by committing to an oral-history project, comments: “the reason no one is interested in the Native story in general, it’s too sad, so sad it can’t even be entertaining, but more importantly because of the way it’s been portrayed, it looks pathetic, and we perpetuate that, but not, fuck that, excuse  my language, but it makes me mad, because the whole picture is not pathetic, and the individual people and stories that you come across are not pathetic or weak or in need of pity, and there’s real passion there, and rage….” In fact, Orange’s individual tales shatters the usual trajectory of ‘Indian’ narrative as demanded in Oxedene’s meaningful lecture. Of course, these ostracized individuals’ plights are laced with a note of sadness, yet Orange imbues a distinct mix of humor, rage, and plaintiveness that it collectively offers a powerful, multi-layered ‘present tense’ statement on the native life. If some stories could perpetuate wooden stereotypes about a group of people then, Orange seems to say, the rightful tales can also render the truth of experiences, often brushed aside by ignorant historians and those with power.

There There delivers great emotional impact as it accelerates towards the terrifying and tense climax. Nevertheless, the novel doesn’t veer into melodrama, filled with mawkish reunions and eleventh-hour epiphany. “Stray bullets and consequences are landing on our unsuspecting bodies even now”, writes the author in the incendiary prologue, and the truth of those words is sorrowfully (and literally) demonstrated in the quick-cutting final chapters. The unaddressed morbid effects of the abusive, genocidal, racist history of a nation keeps revisiting even in the seemingly joyous 21st century gathering, but still Tommy Orange withholds hope in the complex present tense identity of the American ‘Indian’, who keeps on overturning the preconceived notions through their challenging stories.  Overall, There There is a blistering examination of what it means to be a Native American who is “alive, modern, and relevant.”


Tuesday, December 25, 2018

The Boat People – A Deeply Moving Novel on the Complexities and Messiness of the Refugee Experience




“It’s a free country……..Unless no one wants you.”



Fictions endorse empathy and compassion, the powerful emotions that truly makes us human. It can help us discern certain subjects that are clearly far from our life experience and spectrum of realization. In this vein, Canadian author Sharon Bala’s debut novel The Boat People (published January 2018) looks at human suffering on a micro scale, which often gets drowned among the cacophony of impassive headlines and crooked politicians’ battle cry. With the ongoing refugee crisis, Western and European nations have found it hard to express their sympathies for the displaced asylum seekers (from war-torn, famine-afflicted countries), partly the result of the cordially received yet acrimonious, parochial views of the extreme political right. Furthermore, the bureaucratic limbo and the politicized fear of ‘the others’ beclouds common people’s views, shunning greater clarity so as to tackle the crisis. Bala’s Boat People, based on actual events, smartly uses the tools of storytelling to expose the layers of hidden truths and propagandized falsities, snuggled behind the uni-dimensional official reports.  Moreover, the book provides dense context to contemplate the refugee mindset, which we (the privileged) are likely to ignore.

The novel opens with the arrival of around 500 Sri Lankan Tamil refugees (in 2009) in a rickety boat near the coast of British Columbia. Canadian authorities intercept the dingy freighter and take all the emaciated passengers into custody, placing woman and children in a separate facility, splitting the families and adding more to their trauma. The hard-line decision was taken by the government (particularly by Minister Blair) to show the world that the horde of asylum seekers (who are termed as ‘terrorists’) can’t exploit the certified Canadian kindness. Connections are made between the boat people and the LTTE, the militant Tamil organization which was engaged in a prolonged, ruthless civil-war with the oppressive Sinhalese government. For decades, the LTTE ran a de-facto state in the areas controlled by them (mostly in North Sri Lanka), generally hailed as ‘Tamil Eelam’ (the official declaration of an independent Tamil state was the primary demand of LTTE).

The Boat People unfurls from the perspective of three individuals, who are all positioned at different levels in this developing crisis. The first is Mahindan, a mild-mannered Tamil mechanic who has reached the Canadian shores with his six-year-old son Sellian. Mahindan is initially delighted to see the Canadian helicopter and flag ‘welcoming’ their boat. But his relief proves to be premature as Sellian is separated from him (the boy placed in the woman’s quarters). Taken into detention, Mahindan awaits the hearings, which stretches into weeks and months. The next significant character is Priya Rajasekaran, a second-generation Canadian-Tamil articling student, hoping to specialize on corporate law. But circumstances bring her to represent Mahindan and some other claimants from the ship. Priya doesn’t even speak her family’s language, but the case and the revisit into the family’s past increases her allegiance to the damned Tamil refugees. The third perspective is that of adjudicator Grace Nakamura, a third generation Japanese-Canadian who is a long-time associate of the Minister of Public Safety (Mr. Fred Blair), the stubborn politician demanding a hard-line to be drawn on the issue. Although Grace is slightly influenced by the minister’s admonitions, she grapples the ramifications of her decisions. Grace’s conflict is further stoked by her Alzheimer-stricken mother Kumi, who woefully talks on the subject of her family’s relocation to an internment camp (the harsh North American practice during World War II). Grace is bothered by how her rebellious, teenage daughters eagerly listen to their grandmother’s story, who all ascertain that the mistreatment of asylum seekers as a proof of ‘history repeating itself’.

Sharon Bala

The novel’s outline is based on the MV Sun Sea Incident, the cargo ship that brought 492 Sri Lankan Tamil migrants to Canadian Waters on August 2010 (after traveling for at least three months). Nevertheless, what’s interesting about Newfoundland-based author Sharon Bala’s narrative is the way she explores the myriad of layers making up the immigrant story, from the abstract political, bureaucratic lingo to the compassion-filled individual perception. Like every good fiction writer, she does the opposite of bland news reports; profoundly detailing the wide spectrum of human experience that gets submerged under the statistics. The Boat People, which promotes the importance of empathy while accessing the plight of the refugees and disenfranchised, is not exactly a very subtle novel. But at the same time, Bala never veers into melodrama or offers neatly packaged resolutions. Bala does stack the three narratives with a bit of convoluted conflicts, although thankfully she keeps everything open-ended and eschews false optimism.  

One aspect I loved about Bala’s three characters is their perpetual attitudinal shifts. Mahindan, Priya, and Grace are shown to have resolute belief in things, but over the course of the case they are plagued with uncertainties. And despite getting to know a different (unpleasant) reality the characters never give up their hope. Mahindan’s character arc clearly is the most haunting (and wholeheartedly wins our sympathy) as he reminisces about his last months with wife Chitra (2002-2003). More distressing are Mahindan’s flashbacks on the things he had witnessed and did before leaving his blood-soaked nation. On the contrary, it was easy to despise Grace, but slowly as the narrative lays out her fears, stress, and other inner conflicts, I was able to empathize for her (even though we don’t always agree with her). She is a good example of observing how people are easily influenced by solely depending on their (limited) experiences. The themes of identity are superbly explored through Priya’s character, a person constantly negotiating between her two identities.

Bala often excels in bringing a sense of viscerality to her taut prose, pulling in readers to the distinct setting. Two particular scenarios evoked plethora of haunting images in my mind: Mahindan, confined to the detention center, watching and commenting on the glitzy TV game show; the chaotic atmosphere at the hospital while Mahindan admits his wife in labor pain, which is juxtaposed by the alarming news report regarding a deadly suicide-bomber attack. Apart from the familiar themes related to refugee crisis, Bala’s narrative relentlessly touches on the theme of parenthood. Mahindan, Grace, Kumi, Priya’s father, and Hema epitomize the sacrifices inherent in parenthood in order to secure their child’s future. The verdict of Mahindan’s hearing might be left obscure, but he has succeeded as a parent by just bringing Sellian to Canada and enabling a fresh start for the child. Bala also offers a different take on the romanticized view of Canadian benignity. She shows how the nation despite being less critical of the refugee flow (compared to the USA and Western European countries) is also swayed by alleged (unfounded) threats to national security and impaired by bureaucratic indifference. Overall, The Boat People succeeds in bringing into view (in micro and macro scale) the realities of displacement and the deceptive nature of unrelenting political ideologies.