The Guide by R. K. Narayan
R. K. Narayan is one of the most prominent Indian English writers to ever have graced our country. Narayan’s simplistic English stories are woven around realistic portrayals of various Indian characters, and various Indian cities with real names or imaginary ones, the most prominent of them being the little town of Malgudi.
I had brought the book during the Strand Book Fair, a haven for book lovers who wish to buy hordes of new books on a discounted price. Finally, after a year of having brought it, I did get some time to flip through the pages of the book. I was left spellbound by the amazing narrative and story weaving abilities of R.K. Narayan around various characters whom you could easily relate to the people in your every-day life. So synonymous are the roles and portrayals of these characters, such that you will often wonder, why couldn’t I think about that.
It is here, that you will definitely appreciate the brilliance of Narayan’s astute story writing abilities. Narayan was supposedly not a firm believer in age-old traditions prevalent during his times, and also married a woman outside the norms of Tamil Brahman caste, which is historically one of the most blessed upper castes in Indian Society. Still, the way he has penned the traditions of erstwhile Indian society and the dynamism involved with the advent of modernization in his stories beautifully has no wonder left a pleasant sense of admiration among his readers and respect among the western authors of repute, to name a few Somerset Maugham, John Updike and some others from our own land like V S Naipaul.
In his autobiography, R.K. Narayan attributes the idea of The Guide to an incident which he observed in the Cauvery Basin. In his own words:
A recent situation in Mysore offered a setting for such story. A severe drought had dried up all the rivers and tanks; Krishnaraja Sagar, an enormous reservoir feeding channels that irrigated thousands of acres, had also become dry, and its bed, a hundred and fifty feet deep, was now exposed to the sky with fissures and cracks, revealing an ancient submerged temple, coconut stumps, and dehydrated crocodiles. As a desperate measure, the municipal council organized prayers for rains. A group of Brahmans stood knee-deep in water (procured at great cost) on the dry bed of Kaveri, fasted, prayed and chanted certain mantras continuously for eleven days. On the twelfth day it rained. It was really the starting point of The Guide.
The Guide is a beautiful story which is spun around this simple event which still manifests, and is inspired on a true story, with a hero named Raju, whose turmoils, sacrifices and dilemma’s – Narayan effortlessly takes us through. His sense of humor, benign satire, irony, lucid and simple flow of prose is clearly evident in every page of the stories in every one of his fifty years of contributions to the Indian literature. All I can say is that they will continue to remain fresh as decades roll one by one, and the world slips into and escapes from anarchy, mayhem of the mankind. Get one for your bookshelf.
Yes, I liked it too. Many who’re fans of the book, dislike the movie. But I think the movie is pretty good on its own, although not a honest adaptation.
Read ‘Swami and his friends’, it was RK Narayan’s first novel, I’m always taken by its charm.
Priyank
August 17, 2008 at 8:59 pm