Rebirth is the second book by Jahnavi Barua that I am reviewing. I had read her collection of short stories called Next Door about two years back and was totally bowled over. You can read that review here.  I had the privilege of reading the early draft of this novel – see the advantage of having Jahnavi as a friend!Jahnavi started writing as a full time writer in 2004. Initially it was short stories that were published in various anthologies and even wrote a children’s book called, The Boy Who Lost His Voice. This doctor won the Short Fiction contest hosted by British Council in ’05 and then the second prize in the Children’s Fiction category of the same prize. She was awarded the Charles Wallace Trust Fellowship to study Creative Writing in the UK in 2006. She is a “writer by profession, a doctor by education and a birder and gardener by passion”.  The landscape of Assam features prominently in her prose. I saw that in her short stories and the same can be said for Rebirth. The protagonist Kaberi now married to an unloving husband in Bangalore speaks to the unborn child she is carrying and tells us about life back in Assam.

“We would all pile into Bipul Moha’s black Ambassador, the men in front, the women and children at the back, and drive away, usually on a cold winter morning. The boot would be crammed tight with battered suitcases, cloth bags stuffed with packets of biscuits and larus and home made cake, in case they ran out of food at the old Forest Lodge where we stayed.Bipl Moha’s stately speed of forty kilometres an hour coupled with the fact that we stopped every half an hour for either Ma or Bina Mahi to buy vegetables or fish from village folks squatting patiently by the highway meant that it was late afternoon by the time we arrived at Kaziranga.”

Jahnavi’s style of narration is unhurried and yet the speed of storytelling never seems to drop. The little details of the variety of trees, flowers and birds that show up in her stories create a unique flavor of writing that is very enjoyable. As the protagonist’s mood changes so does the landscape. From the urban landscape and life of an apartment in Bangalore to the house built by Joya’s husband Bidyut on the banks of the Brahmaputra river, she describes it all with the skill of a gemcutter. The pace of the story in the first 150 odd pages is absolutely gripping. The resonance in the life of her mother and the parallels with Kaberi’s creates a much larger impact because it is unsaid and unspoken.I personally struggle while closing a story in a novel. Life after all does not end in 203 pages. There is so much more that is happening and sometimes that is a trick that the authors have to master. The novel does not end with the same flourish as I expected. It is like having a fabulous meal and ending up with a slightly syrupy or not-so-sweet dessert.Nevertheless the main course was fabulous and demands a second helping!!———————You can order Jahnavi’s novels from Flipkart by clicking here


Comments

7 responses to “Rebirth by Jahnavi Barua”

  1. I like your appreciative attitude, Abhijit!

  2. Nowadays a popular style of writing fiction is the autobiographical style. While the advantage of using this style is that you don’t need much imagination, the disadvantage is that you need to have a really compelling and unique writing style. It’s one thing to say, “My twin was a quiet boy.” It’s another thing to say, “Estha occupied very little space in the world.” (God of Small Things, Arundhati Roy). If you follow the autobiographical style, and then you write, “We would all pile into Bipul Moha’s black Ambassador, the men in front, the women and children at the back…”.. Is there any real reason really why I would want to actually take the time out to read it? I don’t know. That’s my opinion.

    1. Rhinusmita Kakoty Lahkar Avatar
      Rhinusmita Kakoty Lahkar

      Read the book. This is a small paragraph of a book which the reviewer uses to compare the pace of the book with, as the next paragraph of the review shows.

  3. Kakuli Nag Avatar
    Kakuli Nag

    First person narration has a mystery attached to it – It triggers a certain amount of curiosity in the reader’s mind not just for the characters or the plot. It leaves the reader wondering which section is fact and which portion is a fragment of writer’s imagination. That, makes the read pretty interesting.After reading Kite Runner, I always felt I have visited Kabul as the vivid description kind of drifts you there, allowing the readers to visualise it in their own individual way. My virtual tour to Kabul through Kite Runner was terrific – could not muster the courage to read another book for almost a year. If Rebirth can give me that kind of deep insight about Asom, Asomiyas, their life, culture with a story binding, I will definitely want to read it.

  4. I hadn’t heard of Jahnavi Baurah till I met her in person, in a workshop organised by author Vijay Nair. The very fact that we hail from the same corner of the country was enough to rouse that subliminal sense of kinship.Although she has a great personality it was her acumen in creative writing that enthralled me. So the next and obvious was to google her and learn more about her.That’s how I ended up picking Next Door.The title itself is so well suited to the collection of stories,stories that occur next door everyday, but fail to grasp our attention or empathy. My favorite story was “Awakening” the story of a mother forcing herself to come to terms with the demise of her only son, while being judged as being over reactive by her kin. I found myself crying (literally) towards the end of the story. I may be biased in saying this, but being an Assamese Next Door gave life to many memories that were lying somewhere in the dusty closet of my memories.

  5. Hi, Abhijit! I just finished reading Next Door and I just loved it. I’m a translator and I would really like to translate these stories into Spanish. From what I have been reseraching, there isn’t a translation yet. However, I’m having it hard at contacting the author. Do you know where I can reach her?Thanks so much.

  6. Rhinusmita Kakoty Lahkar Avatar
    Rhinusmita Kakoty Lahkar

    You write the end was syrupy but I feel the end was the best. She finally takes a decision and makes it known by deliberately leaving out her husband in the list of phone calls and the last call. That’s her rebirth.

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