-Of People, Their Struggles and Their Lives-
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Review of 'Kernels' by Ajay Gupte
Stephen King once said that reading a novel is like entering into a relationship. It's your comfort corner, a place where you know you are loved and protected and you yearn to return to those arms after a long day of work. It’s this pull that makes a book especially a novel alluring and atttactive.
A short story, on the other hand, now that's a different deal. Mr King compares the experience of reading a thrilling short story to a kiss you steal in a dark alley with a stranger- it thrills you, heats up your blood and sends your pulse into a tizzy.
And what a tumultuous affair I had with this anthology. Torrid and phenomenal.
A collection of 15 shorts, Kernels kickstarts with (Dis)honor that tackles the themes of interfaith marriage, broken friendships, delusional thoughts of prestige and caste pride and lives of people in a village. Samar and Javed, both childhood friends who meet in Gurugram after a long time are at different junctures in their lives. A disappeared girl between them, how will she change the equations between them?
In second story Justice, Mohan has refused a lawyer in a court case, he has refused defence lawyer but abruptly, someone appears to defend him. It’s Supriya Vaze, his daughter Savita’s school friend.
In The Dark Side of the Pandemic, author’s focus is on the struggle of a village with Covid-19.
In my favourite, The Postman Rings Twice, there are just two employees in a post office in Vansaigaon. The postman Sakharam and post master Sanjayrao. One day postman Sakharam receives a letter which is addressed to the God.
In the last story Life After Death, Bhaiji who lives in Nehar wali haveli in Pimpla village, is distraught because all his four sons have moved on from the life of village into corporate lives and rarely visit him.
Kernels is about ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances. Their guts, grit and gumption when they are pushed to the wall is well etched by the author. It is their struggles and their aspirations and dream that tie them to the milieu around the reader and makes for a thread of connection.