MONSOONS IN MALABAR: A Satisfying journey into the deeper self of Malabar
“The naked figure was cut clean at the throat, as if he were a
sacrificial chicken at the consummation of a Gulikan dance ritual.” __ Dr. P.
V. Jayaraj, Monsoons in Malabar.
Monsoons in
Malabar is the first novel by Dr. P. V Jayaraj, Associate
Professor of English, and Head of the Department at a reputed college in
Kannur, Kerala. The social, cultural, and political landscape of Malabar has
not been explored significantly in long fiction let alone in English long
fiction written by Indian authors. Monsoons
in Malabar is the first Indian English novel to explore the history and
society of North Malabar.
The author is from Malabar, and knows the nuances of the
landscape. This offers a precisely wrought well-plotted novel for those who
would like to know and learn more about Malabar. My interest in reading Monsoons in Malabar took sky hype as I realized
how valuable this reading experience could be for my own understanding of the
territory. My first trilogy of short story collections titled Hope, Vengeance,
and History trilogy derives inspiration and material from Cannanore, a
half-imagine and half-real city and Salode, a dreamed up small town in North Malabar,
situated east of Cannanore.
Ravi Shanker IPS is the protagonist of Monsoons in Malabar, who is apparently, in a “walking back” through
memory lane. His memory is inextricably woven with Malabar, especially North
Malabar. Kalloor, its people and nature enchant the readers in this commendable
achievement By Dr. Jayaraj. Past and
present come together in a nostalgic dance and the Monsoon season plays an
important part in this book. It is during one Monsoon that Ravi returns his
homeland from the hectic and distant life beyond the Coorg, in Karanataka. Unnielayachan
is another impressive character, whose life is made meaningful by alcohol and
sex.
Through his walk in the memory lane, Ravi Shanker’s sole
purpose, it seemed, was to reconnect with his uncle. It is evident that the
affection Ravi Shanker feels for his uncle as a young boy is at the centre of
his return trip to old and dusty memories.
I often pray at the shrine of St. Teresa, in Mahe, Pondicherry,
for uncluttered flow of words. Because, as a writer, words form the basis of my
being. Where do words come from? From the all-encompassing loving spirit of
God? Where else? Memories are, on the contrary, dependent on what dimension of
existence we are participating. For an earthly dimension of existence, they are
worldly, painfully distant, and occasionally soothing and warm. It’s a stunning
scenery when a novel becomes such a grand-scale alchemy as the meeting of words
and memory—the heavenly and the worldly. Dr. Jayaraj’s Monsoons in Malabar is a
very impressive specimen of this kind.
This novel leads readers through some of the rarely existent and
age-old customs of Malabar such as Gulikan and legends such as Kuttichathan. Shekhu
Vaidyar’s Dhanvantari Ayurvedic Soap and the CID Sanyasi become everlasting and
green fabric of memory left behind in our mind in this Malabar caricature.
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