1911th BLOG POST
8th
Book of 2021
Writing
short stories is an art which is very difficult even for the writers who think
and write continuously. Even the authors who publish full-fledged novel say
that writing short stories are a different game altogether as you have limited
words to define your character, make their situation familiar to the reader and
also craft a moving story around it. I have read many compilations of short
stories and anthologies but very few have made their mark in order to make me
recommend them to my readers. I have just completed reading “Of Beasts and
Beauty” written by the authoress, Bindu. The book consists of 13 short stories
where each of them is distinct and unique and says something which will make
you move uncomfortably in your seat. This is one anthology that I must say can
get the due for the short story writers.
The
short stories mentioned in this book plays basically on the theme of the title
of the book which has two keywords: Beauty and Beasts. In some of
the stories, you will find beauty and beast in two different characters whereas
in other stories, you will find both of them imbibed in a single character
itself. Either the beauty is turning into the beast or the beast is turning
into the beauty. Many stories are women-oriented and I liked the way they are
been handled where they don’t scream feminism and women-empowerment in your
ears but speak it in a way that you understand a tough life that a woman in
India has to go through.
The
writing style of Bindu is quite advanced which will make the people reading
literature resonate with the language and the stories. Some beginners might
find tough to understand the language due to the advanced way of crafting a
sentence – sometimes actively and passively. Also, the stories aren’t
straight-forward for the school-going kid to understand them but they are meant
for matured audience who have read some incredible stuffs or understand the
language in which the authoress is speaking on some really deep topics with
elegance and patience.
Every
story is of around 13-15 pages and some of them are written so beautifully that
you’ll feel that you are reading a poem or watching a painting for a long time.
Bindu definitely has talent that speaks in each and every word in her stories.
She is very particular about the message she wants to convey through her
stories and you can relate to it by the climax of every story. After completing
the book, I could understand the cover page of the book where a girl’s image is
blur. I am keeping this a secret for you to read the book yourself and decode
it.
I
would like to mention few stories and the insights from it:
-
“The
Longest Night” talks about a girl’s struggle and compromises in her job as an
air-hostess.
-
“Munimji”
speaks of how a woman is capable yet society judges her at every stage- either
in her marriage or even after she is again single after her husband’s demise.
-
“Ramratni
and the Far Gymkhana” is about the patience and humiliations a woman can keep
bearing for her children.
-
“Samer”
is about what drug addiction can do to you – how slave you become of it once
you start possessing it.
-
“The
Leopard Diaries” is the story I believe author got the chance to show her
philosophical and spiritual side.
-
“Sculpture”
is such a unique writing piece where you meet with a character of girl who sculpts
and surprises everyone around her. Also, how she relates the sculpture with her
own body experience is something I liked to read a lot.
-
“Meeting
& Mating” makes you think if what we teach our children is something we
ourselves understand and follow. I liked the way whole story is kept very light
and the hard-hitting message is given only in the end.
-
The
last story “I Fell in Love with a Trippy Gypsy!” is a nice end given to the
book which talks about so many contemporary and social problems.
Now,
talking about few drawbacks, I must say that the language of authoress is
little tough for the new beginners to read. I believe authoress could have
written few stories in a light language whereas few in the way she has written
to give the book the balance it needed for catering to all class of readers.
Secondly, few stories are dragged a bit which I believe makes it boring for a
while in between. Lastly, I feel that considering few stories in the book, I
was expecting more spiritual or philosophical take from it but author keeps it
limited to the story itself without taking that dimension into consideration
which I feel could have given little more life to some stories.
Overall,
I must say this book shall be a favourite in every reader’s shelf who likes
reading good and matured short stories with some darkness in it. I give this
book 4.25 stars out of 5. I wish to read a full-fledged novel by the author
Bindu in future.
Thanks.
WRITING BUDDHA
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