The God of Small Things
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Today I finished reading The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy, and I remembered what it was like to be a child.
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Roy used language as a creative tool to tell a tale through Children's and then as adults' perspectives.
I have a lot to say about this book. The characters in this book make it what it is. The relationship between the twins and their storyline is continuously compared with one another, something that really provoked my curiosity and made me eager to know more. Secondly, the mother's character? Holy shit. I feel like she represents a portion of the Indian population that are so prevalent but are still hiding in the shadows simultaneously.
Love the theme of the 'small things' and 'the big things' and the influx between them. Also, the theme of family obligation is so important. In India it's like prison shackles changed on to individuals.
If there's anything you should read, it's this book.
I read this book in 1999 and what stands out in my memory is the politics of the Indian masses. They still look to Communism to save them. My maternal grandfather was a staunch Communist. But I have come to appreciate how all the countries of this world use an eclectic mix of all types of government to fit the needs of their unique populations.
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The prose. I'll elaborate on that. At first I thought the Capitalisation of Nouns (and Other Words Too) was a bit of a gimmick, but then I remembered this was a story told in third person largely from the perspective of two children - twins (interspersed with the conventional God-Narrator). That's how I thought back when I was a kid too. I was entranced by objects, and the words that described those objects. Sometimes it'd even be intangible things, like emotions. And in my head, they were capitalised. They were important.