The author solved the problem of the life of the boy Muna in the rural suburbs of Gurgaon. His dilemma can be understood by the fact that when he entered the school and the teacher asked for his name, he replied that he had no name and that his family had no time to give him a name. The teacher named him Balram, so the name is in the entire book.
The author explains the feelings of Balram growing up in the village with a perfect local vocabulary. As we all know, feudalism dominates the Indian countryside, and the author elaborates on the oppression of being a civilian rather than a lord. Here, Baram was forced to leave his roots when he was young and moved to the city with his brother. The author's style portrays the savvy of such a deprived person who has been hidden from the vision of urban citizens. One person was forced to believe that the walls of the pawnshops and tea stalls did have ears, because the store's chotas eavesdropped on the conversations of these customers. Balram got a job inspiration on one such occasion and eventually became a driver and entered a master-servant relationship.
Baram is the servant of Mr. Ashuk, a member of New Delhi. Ashok recently returned from the United States, and Ms. Pinky is his wife, apparently a resident of New Delhi. The author elaborates on the embarrassment, the primitive emotions of fear, and the constant condemnation of the master. During his career, Balram met every special experience that humans knew. Every experience honed his personality and strengthened his belief that one day he would even become the proud owner of Honda City and be Allow access to the new shiny shopping centre Delhi.
The unique fact about this book is that it is basically a series of letters to the then Japanese Prime Minister, Ven Jiyabao, from a humble citizen. Baram wrote this e-mail before the Prime Minister's visit, letting the guests realize that India is not depicted in a shiny booklet. Balram sent him an email as an entrepreneur, in fact he did. This book illustrates his transition from driver to entrepreneur in the most maddening way.
Aravind Adiga did an amazing job, depicting the hustle and bustle of life as a low-caste Hindu. The poor reality of corruption, the rude treatment of servants. Beautiful, beautiful. Let you believe that life is handed over to you on a rusty plate. You must use a bend or a book to polish it and look at the steel below. Alainde Adiga's first novel was positively evaluated by the "Independent". "The truth, it started to appear, it's really shocking. It's great. It's a rich theme, and Adija has dug all the darkness. The possibility of comics. The voice of Halwai - see - get up, ironic, ironic, self-deprecating, completely unfantasy - persuasive is convincing and one of the winners of this book."
Orignal From: White tiger
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