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Two brothers come to school and do nothing but tell stories. A young woman works at the Indian Consulate in a major American city. A man goes to a singles dance. An unnamed narrator offers his “notes” on modern-day America. An old Jewish man in a nursing home tells the tale of his daughter. A retired man in India tries to collect his pension. A woman tells the story of her husband’s death in partition India. A man goes from interview to interview, hoping for employment. Some stories are fable-like, others more realistic. However, all stories deal, in one way or another, with small, “mediocre” people—people trying to fit into a world of bigness, applause, success.
Magnetically readable, Notes of a Mediocre Man offers alternating views of America and India through the eyes of ordinary people—children, workers, survivors, underdogs—whose inner and outer worlds are realized in a brilliantly poignant, fable-like style reminiscent of Isaac Bashevis Singer’s. Aurora speaks for common or “mediocre” humanity, buffeted by the brutalities and dreams of an unsettled global era; his immigrants recall Bharati Mukherjee’s characters struggling with disillusion, while his Indians are as knowingly and lovingly depicted as R.K. Narayan’s broad range of human types. Yet his style is unique: the signature voice of a storyteller who unerringly fits all local themes and affiliations within the compass of philosophical questions—of good and evil, innocence and experience. A beautiful book that reads fast but lingers long in memory.
336 Pages
9in * 6in *
1gr
March 01, 2017
Hamilton
CA
9781771831413
eng