In contrast, Lock’s wife Ellen, whom he has left behind but whose memory he evokes constantly, is anything but a pushover. The complexities of his marriage, which when contrasted with the simple stoic forbearance of BB’s marriage add to his dilemma; there is also the guilt that follows when things with BB don’t go as planned.
As the novel progresses Lock settles into BB’s family, learning the Indian ways. Even the wife thaws and BB’s son whom he calls “Jolly boy” also takes a liking to him, as does she. However, thanks to dramatic license, all does not go well and Lock finds himself at BB’s hospital bedside willing him to live. He had been helping BB set a new world record in a bid to seal a deal that would raise him from poverty to celebrity status. The final blow comes from a well-wisher; no guesses who. But will BB survive? That is the meat on the bone.
At first glance the novel appears an India-by-the-numbers kind of book. The saffron-robed monks, the man on a bed of nails immune to pain (in this case a sportsman addicted to extreme endurance), the wistful descriptions of Mumbai, the pathetic fallacy of sultry heat and seductive monsoons, the colourful turbans and fluttering saris, the fascination and disgust of eating with one’s hand, the poverty, the filth and of course the acceptance of it by the people who dwell in it. It’s only when you are deep into the novel that you realise that there is more depth to it than the shallow fascination of a white man’s India. But if one perseveres, what appears at first a slightly dated attempt at capturing the exotic is actually a book about the search for dignity and meaning in human experience.
However, the language is heavily sensorial at places, almost burying the drama in the self-indulgent imagery. Also, although Kelman is an expert at tragicomedy and the book is anything but a sob story, it lacks the sharpness of his earlier work. At times the narration dulls too much and slips almost into farce, so pronounced are the caricatures of lower-middle-class Indians and the bumbling Englishman. There is a sprinkling of humour such as the scene when Lock asks the Sikh photographer (whom he refers to as the “Turbanator”) whether different coloured turbans were like different coloured karate belts, awarded according to abilities. But it is upstaged by the melodrama. For example the scene where Lock gives away his shoes to a bent old man waiting for the monsoons is a clichéd fit of a dying man’s overdone sentimentality.
Similarly, the pathetic fallacy of the monsoons, the heat, and India in general, e.g., “[Navi Mumbai] is sucking India’s marrow from it’s bone,” or old Bombay: “a place where death spills songlike from every doorway and untapped dreams rise like smoke from the rubbish fires and rat holes”,and other such sentimentality sprinkled throughout the book seems formulaic and forced. The slow pace and the non-linear narrative puts further distance between the reader and the page.
In that sense, the novel fails to evoke the same fish out of water, discovering a new culture, kind of empathy that Pigeon English did. Although an entertaining read, Man on Fire lacks not just the pace but also the mystery of Kelman’s first novel, a book also about an outsider navigating a foreign culture.
Unlike the Ghanaian-Londoner lingo of his earlier work, which built up a raw sentiment as the young boy struggled to make sense of a new world, the overdone lyricism and exotica of Lock’s India as he tries to squeeze out the wisdom of the East in tamed tigers, thrashing monsoons and fire-eaters, and force beauty in the overflowing gutters of India, is distracting instead of engaging.
Perhaps it is unfair to compare the two books, but it is also unavoidable. The novel in question lacks freshness. It feels uncomfortably familiar and Kiplish, instead of Slum Dog and Rushdieish, as was probably intended. There are some good observations about the Indian way of life but there is also a lot of chunkiness and an awkward seriousness that overshadows the maturity of the prose. However, Bibhuti Nayak’s character is a fascinating subject and Kelman has managed to capture his voice effectively. His unshakable self-belief and his journey through extreme pain is a reason in itself to read this book.
The reviewer holds a Masters degree from Oxford University and a PhD in Creative Writing from the University of Leicester. She teaches Feminist Fiction at the Institute of Business Administration, Karachi.
Man on Fire
(NOVEL)
By Stephen Kelman
Bloomsbury Circus, UK
ISBN 978-1408865460
296pp.