Beggars' bedlam

Nabāruṇa Bhaṭṭācārya

Book - 2024

Marshall Bhodi Sarkar and his lieutenant Sarkhel surreptitiously dig on the banks of the Ganges River looking for crude oil reserves. Instead, they unearth curved daggers, rusty broadswords, and a Portuguese cannon. Bhodi is an occasional military man and the lead sorcerer of the secret black-magic sect named Choktar. He joins forces with the flying Flaperoos--men with a predilection for alcohol and petty vandalism--to declare outright war against the Marxist-Leninist West Bengal government. In a bloodless revolution that is fascinating in its utter implausibility, a motley crew of yet more implausible characters come together in a magic-realist fictional remapping of Calcutta.

Saved in:
1 being processed
Coming Soon
Subjects
Genres
Magic realist fiction
Science fiction
Novels
Published
London : New York : Seagull Books 2024.
Language
English
Bengali
Main Author
Nabāruṇa Bhaṭṭācārya (author)
Other Authors
Rijula Das (translator)
Item Description
"Originally published in Bengali as Kangal Malsat by Saptarshi Prakashani in 2003."--Title page verso.
Distribution information from the publisher's web site: https://www.seagullbooks.org/distribution-information/
Physical Description
301 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781803093789
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This uproarious novel from Bhattacharya (1948--2014), originally published in 2003, exemplifies the author's penchant for freewheeling magical realism and rollicking revolutionary narratives. The action takes place in 1999 Kolkata, where three severed heads are discovered on the shores of a river, prompting the police to write them off as tidal refuse from a cremation site or a garbage dump. The scene turns out to be a prelude for an uprising against the local communist government led by Bhodi, a member of the Choktar black magic sect, who joins forces with three mischievous Fyatarus, flying creatures who ransack people's homes. Over the course of their campaign against "governmental assbuggery," they wreak pandemonium to deliriously comic effect. In one of many madcap episodes of Pynchonesque action, the Fyatarus salvage a cannon once used by Portuguese pirates, then fire it against their enemies. The sprawling cast includes the ghost of Josef Stalin, a communist official who dreams about visiting North Korea, a talking raven, and a police commissioner who's beheaded by a flying saucer controlled by Bhodi and his crew. Bhattacharya effortlessly shifts between high and low registers, zagging from erudite references to Kolkata's political history and its poets to the Fyatarus' scatological barbs (everyone they encounter is an "asswipe" or a "pube"), and he makes every sentence fizz with the spirit of insurrection. It's an absolute blast. (July)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved