Skip to main content

Book Review: A Hundred Little Flames by Preeti Shenoy

A Hundred Little Flames by Preeti Shenoy is a modern tale about generation gap, especially, today, how a relationship between a son and a father grows up to a point of no return.


As the story opens up, readers can see that Ayan, a young man in his mid-twenties, is all about a forced soul and trying to be a fit in the midst of gritty professionals in Pune. He does not love his job because he can never be as ambitious as his father. It was his father who had put him through Mechanical Engineering and then MBA, and even into his first job. Well, things go sour all the more between his father and him when he's unintentionally spotted with escorts during a company party. The pictures of that party goes viral and he is forced to put his papers down.

Dejected and of course afraid of his father’s tirade, he is transported to a small village in Kerala to his grouchy (around seventy-year-old) grandfather in an ancestral property named as - Thekko Madom.

Ayan feels pity to see his grandfather living a lonely life, on the other hand mesmerizes to see his diaries of his early days like youth and all. Gradually, Ayan being too sophisticated by the urban grooming comes to term with life when he begins gelling with the old man. As the diaries begin unfolding, more and more narration about the father-son relationship resurfaces and of course also about love and other rite of passages obligatory in life. In a nutshell, the story shuttles between today and yesterday.

Through the diaries Ayan comes to know about the real villainous nature of his father, Jairaj. The kind of treatment his grandfather received from Jairaj in fact actuates Ayan to hate his father. His father is shown quite greedy and mean in the guise of being ambitious. Jairaj gets his comeuppance when he finds that in the will he is not included, rather it goes to Ayan and others. Other than Gopal Shankar, Rohini too is a very touching character in the novel. When the old man, Gopal Shankar passes away she says that, “When dear ones pass away, we love them more and remember them in our heart like a hundred little flames".

Prior to this novel, Preeti was widely known as a writer of romance novels. However, this time she has come up with deeper voice to touch the souls of Indian generations. Probably, she wants to relay the message about the importance of father-son relationship, which gradually deteriorates with passage of time, as such is the rite of passage of life. The story builds up gradually, and the writing style is fairly good, understandable to all.

Comments

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Book Review: The Blue Umbrella by Ruskin Bond

Among all Ruskin Bond books, The Blue Umbrella has, so far, gathered immense applaud from readers and critics alike.  This is a short novel, but the kind of moral lessons it teaches to us are simply overwhelming. This is a story of Binya, a poor little girl living with her mother and an elder brother, Bijju, in a small hilly village of Garhwal. One day while herding her two cows back home, she stumbles upon some city people enjoying the picnic in the valley. She is enthralled to see them well-groomed and rich. She craves to be one like them and among many other things of their, a blue frilly umbrella catches her attention. She begins craving for it. On the other hand, the city people get attracted by her innocent beauty and the pendant in her neck. The pendant consists of leopard’s claw – which is considered a mascot widely in the hills. Binya trades her pendant off with the blue umbrella. The blue umbrella is so much beautiful that soon it becomes a topic of conversatio...

Poem Summary: Where The Mind Is Without Fear by Rabindranath Tagore

Poem by Rabindranath Tagore: Where the mind is without fear and the head is held high Where knowledge is free Where the world has not been broken up into fragments By narrow domestic walls Where words come out from the depth of truth Where tireless striving stretches its arms towards perfection Where the clear stream of reason has not lost its way Into the dreary desert sand of dead habit Where the mind is led forward by thee Into ever-widening thought and action Into that heaven of freedom, my Father, let my country awake. Short Summary: This poem is written by Rabindranath Tagore during pre-independence days, when India was a colony of the British. The underlying theme of the poem is absolute freedom; the poet wants the citizens of his country to be living in a free state. According to the poem, we see that the poet is expressing his views there should be a country, like where people live without any sort of fear and with pure dignity…they should ...

Character Sketch of Binya from ‘The Blue Umbrella’ by Ruskin Bond

The Blue Umbrella by Ruskin Bond is a popular children’s story. It features Binya as the main character, though there are other important characters as well, but the story revolves around Binya and her little beautiful umbrella. The story is widely popular among children, thus it has also been included in the schools’ syllabus all across the country. Since it is often taught in the school, thus the character sketch of Binya is often demanded by students from year to year. Character Sketch of Binya from The Blue Umbrella by Ruskin Bond Binya is the main character of the novel ‘The Blue Umbrella’ by Ruskin Bond. Her full name is Binyadevi. As in the hills or anywhere in India it is a kind of trend to call children with their short nicknames. Binya’s elder brother’s name is Bijju, whereas his real name is Vijay. Binya aged eleven is a hilly girl. She lives with her small family in the hills of Garhwal. Her father died when she was two years of age. For sustenance, the...