The lesser mortals use this latter escape clause to ply their trade, arguing that, after all, it is fiction. The straitjacket of plausibility, however, is the universal touchstone to identify great fiction. So, then, does Melody of a Tear have a plausible storyline? Absolutely. Even when reality crosses the threshold of fantasy, the narrative holds its line. It is like somebody managing to be rational even in a dream. The story has just such an airtight plausibility, and for a debut novel it doesn’t get any better than that.
Another element of the craft is the manner in which and the pace at which the plot unfolds. Does it keep you hooked? You bet. On the surface of it, the narrative is simple and spontaneous. Not many would even realise the amount of manufacturing that has surely gone behind the scenes to keep at bay the complexity of a tale that has the tale of the tale built in, and where one narrator passes on the baton effortlessly to another in a move that is as swift as it is breathtaking.
And, finally, the diction. Is it lucid? If it is not, nothing is. It has that level of lucidity. Akhtar has an amazing sense of observation and the due process of internalisation that leads him to descriptions, similes and metaphors that are charming, refreshing and literary to the core. There is not one — repeat, not one — cliché across the novel.
With his observation and especially his expression that is simultaneously perky and seemingly surreal, Akhtar does bring to mind The Gun Seller, another debut novel, by Hugh Laurie who would be better known to many as the curt, pill-popping diagnostician in the television show House M.D., and to others as a wonderful musician with multiple albums to his credit. Called a “terrific debut” by the respected Telegraph, the story and its telling remain two different entities. One is sombre, the other sparkling. The duality is not as stark in Akhtar’s case, but when he talks of, say, suicide, and the preparation leading up to D-day, he does touch that rarity.
“One fine Sunday evening two years ago, we both sat unacquainted at the Seaview parapet, buried in our books. Mind you, back then, reading was still considered an acceptable form of public behaviour.” — Excerpt from the book
Good fiction in any case is like walking a tightrope. With a story as intricate and a plot as intriguing as that of Melody of a Tear, it becomes a crisscrossing, zig-zagging tightrope. Just spend a second on the imagery to see what a tricky undertaking it must have been. To his credit, Akhtar has managed it with aplomb through a narrative that gets paradoxical and diction that borders on the oxymoronic.
As the dictum goes, there is one novel in all human beings. It is so because every life has a story, is a story. A person’s creative process, which any piece of fiction in essence is, can be realistically judged only from the second novel onwards. Anybody with a vested interest in enjoying a good piece of literature would — and should — hope that Haroon Khalid Akhtar would pick up the gauntlet and keep them coming.
The reviewer is a member of staff
Melody of a Tear
By Haroon Khalid Akhtar
Niyogi Books, India
ISBN: 978-9386906779
210pp.
Published in Dawn, Books & Authors, April 14th, 2019