ISBN10: 039592720X ISBN13: 9780395927205
Edition/Copyright: 99
Publisher: Mariner Books
Cover: Paperback
Year Published: 1999
Weight: 0.5lbs.
Used Condition: Good/Excellent
|
Interpreter of Maladies
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Used

In Stock

Guaranteed Condition
|
New
Sold Out
However, as the largest online textbook source, inventory comes in constantly.
Check back soon!
|
eText
Sold Out
However, as the largest online textbook source, inventory comes in constantly.
Check back soon!
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
Lahiri, Jhumpa :
Lahiri was born in 1967 in London, England, and raised in Rhode Island. She has traveled several times to India,
where both her parents were born and raised, and where a number of the stories in Interpreter of Maladies are set.
She is a graduate of Barnard College, where she received a B.A. in English literature, and of Boston University,
where she received an M.A. in English, M.A. in Creative Writing and M.A. in Comparative Studies in Literature and
the Arts, and a Ph.D. in Renaissance Studies. She has taught creative writing at Boston University and the Rhode
Island School of Design. A winner of the Henfield Prize from the Transatlantic Review, she has published stories
in The New Yorker, Agni, Story Quarterly, and elsewhere. Her stories will appear in Prize Stories: The O. Henry
Awards and The Best American Short Stories. Jhumpa received the 2000 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction for her collection
of short stories, INTERPRETER OF MALADIES. She currently lives in New York City, where she is working on a novel.
Excerpt from Interpreter of Maladies
Chapter One: A Temporary Matter
The notice informed them that it was a temporary matter: for five days their electricity would be cut off for one
hour, beginning at eight P.M. A line had gone down in the last snowstorm, and the repairmen were going to take
advantage of the milder evenings to set it right. The work would affect only the houses on the quiet tree-lined
street, within walking distance of a row of brick-faced stores and a trolley stop, where Shoba and Shukumar had
lived for three years.
"It's good of them to warn us," Shoba conceded after reading the notice aloud, more for her own benefit
than Shukumar's. She let the strap of her leather satchel, plump with files, slip from her shoulders, and left
it in the hallway as she walked into the kitchen. She wore a navy blue poplin raincoat over gray sweatpants and
white sneakers, looking, at thirty-three, like the type of woman she'd once claimed she would never resemble.
She'd come from the gym. Her cranberry lipstick was visible only on the outer reaches of her mouth, and her eyeliner
had left charcoal patches beneath her lower lashes. She used to look this way sometimes, Shukumar thought, on mornings
after a party or a night at a bar, when she'd been too lazy to wash her face, too eager to collapse into his arms.
She dropped a sheaf of mail on the table without a glance. Her eyes were still fixed on the notice in her other
hand. "But they should do this sort of thing during the day."
"When I'm here, you mean," Shukumar said. He put a glass lid on a pot of lamb, adjusting it so only the
slightest bit of steam could escape. Since January he'd been working at home, trying to complete the final chapters
of his dissertation on agrarian revolts in India. "When do the repairs start?"
"It says March nineteenth. Is today the nineteenth?" Shoba walked over to the framed corkboard that hung
on the wall by the fridge, bare except for a calendar of William Morris wallpaper patterns. She looked at it as
if for the first time, studying the wallpaper pattern carefully on the top half before allowing her eyes to fall
to the numbered grid on the bottom. A friend had sent the calendar in the mail as a Christmas gift, even though
Shoba and Shukumar hadn't celebrated Christmas that year.
"Today then," Shoba announced. "You have a dentist appointment next Friday, by the way."
He ran his tongue over the tops of his teeth; he'd forgotten to brush them that morning. It wasn't the first time.
He hadn't left the house at all that day, or the day before. The more Shoba stayed out, the more she began putting
in extra hours at work and taking on additional projects, the more he wanted to stay in, not even leaving to get
the mail, or to buy fruit or wine at the stores by the trolley stop.
Six months ago, in September, Shukumar was at an academic conference in Baltimore when Shoba went into labor, three
weeks before her due date. He hadn't wanted to go to the conference, but she had insisted; it was important to
make contacts, and he would be entering the job market next year. She told him that she had his number at the hotel,
and a copy of his schedule and flight numbers, and she had arranged with her friend Gillian for a ride to the hospital
in the event of an emergency. When the cab pulled away that morning for the airport, Shoba stood waving good-bye
in her robe, with one arm resting on the mound of her belly as if it were a perfectly natural part of her body.
Each time he thought of that moment, the last moment he saw Shoba pregnant, it was the cab he remembered most,
a station wagon, painted red with blue lettering. It was cavernous compared to their own car. Although Shukumar
was six feet tall, with hands too big ever to rest comfortably in the pockets of his jeans, he felt dwarfed in
the back seat. As the cab sped down Beacon Street, he imagined a day when he and Shoba might need to buy a station
wagon of their own, to cart their children back and forth from music lessons and dentist appointments. He imagined
himself gripping the wheel, as Shoba turned around to hand the children juice boxes. Once, these images of parenthood
had troubled Shukumar, adding to his anxiety that he was still a student at thirty-five. But that early autumn
morning, the trees still heavy with bronze leaves, he welcomed the image for the first time.
A member of the staff had found him somehow among the identical convention rooms and handed him a stiff square
of stationery. It was only a telephone number, but Shukumar knew it was the hospital. When he returned to Boston
it was over. The baby had been born dead. Shoba was lying on a bed, asleep, in a private room so small there was
barely enough space to stand beside her, in a wing of the hospital they hadn't been to on the tour for expectant
parents. Her placenta had weakened and she'd had a cesarean, though not quickly enough. The doctor explained that
these things happen. He smiled in the kindest way it was possible to smile at people known only professionally.
Shoba would be back on her feet in a few weeks. There was nothing to indicate that she would not be able to have
children in the future.
These days Shoba was always gone by the time Shukumar woke up. He would open his eyes and see the long black hairs
she shed on her pillow and think of her, dressed, sipping her third cup of coffee already, in her office downtown,
where she searched for typographical errors in textbooks and marked them, in a code she had once explained to him,
with an assortment of colored pencils. She would do the same for his dissertation, she promised, when it was ready.
He envied her the specificity of her task, so unlike the elusive nature of his. He was a mediocre student who had
a facility for absorbing details without curiosity. Until September he had been diligent if not dedicated, summarizing
chapters, outlining arguments on pads of yellow lined paper. But now he would lie in their bed until he grew bored,
gazing at his side of the closet which Shoba always left partly open, at the row of the tweed jackets and corduroy
trousers he would not have to choose from to teach his classes that semester. After the baby died it was too late
to withdraw from his teaching duties. But his adviser had arranged things so that he had the spring semester to
himself. Shukumar was in his sixth year of graduate school. "That and the summer should give you a good push,"
his adviser had said. "You should be able to wrap things up by next September."
But nothing was pushing Shukumar. Instead he thought of how he and Shoba had become experts at avoiding each other
in their three-bedroom house, spending as much time on separate floors as possible. He thought of how he no longer
looked forward to weekends, when she sat for hours on the sofa with her colored pencils and her files, so that
he feared that putting on a record in his own house might be rude. He thought of how long it had been since she
looked into his eyes and smiled, or whispered his name on those rare occasions they still reached for each other's
bodies before sleeping.
In the beginning he had believed that it would pass, that he and Shoba would get through it all somehow. She was
only thirty-three. She was strong, on her feet again. But it wasn't a consolation. It was often nearly lunchtime
when Shukumar would finally pull himself out of bed and head downstairs to the coffeepot, pouring out the extra
bit Shoba left for him, along with an empty mug, on the countertop.
Shukumar gathered onion skins in his hands and let them drop into the garbage pail, on top of the ribbons of fat
he'd trimmed from the lamb. He ran the water in the sink, soaking the knife and the cutting board, and rubbed a
lemon half along his fingertips to get rid of the garlic smell, a trick he'd learned from Shoba. It was seven-thirty.
Through the window he saw the sky, like soft black pitch. Uneven banks of snow still lined the sidewalks, though
it was warm enough for people to walk about without hats or gloves. Nearly three feet had fallen in the last storm,
so that for a week people had to walk single file, in narrow trenches. For a week that was Shukumar's excuse for
not leaving the house. But now the trenches were widening, and water drained steadily into grates in the pavement.
"The lamb won't be done by eight," Shukumar said. "We may have to eat in the dark."
"We can light candles," Shoba suggested. She unclipped her hair, coiled neatly at her nape during the
days, and pried the sneakers from her feet without untying them. "I'm going to shower before the lights go,"
she said, heading for the staircase. "I'll be down."
Shukumar moved her satchel and her sneakers to the side of the fridge. She wasn't this way before. She used to
put her coat on a hanger, her sneakers in the closet, and she paid bills as soon as they came. But now she treated
the house as if it were a hotel. The fact that the yellow chintz armchair in the living room clashed with the blue-and-maroon
Turkish carpet no longer bothered her. On the enclosed porch at the back of the house, a crisp white bag still
sat on the wicker chaise, filled with lace she had once planned to turn into curtains.
While Shoba showered, Shukumar went into the downstairs bathroom and found a new toothbrush in its box beneath
the sink. The cheap, stiff bristles hurt his gums, and he spit some blood into the basin. The spare brush was one
of many stored in a metal basket. Shoba had bought them once when they were on sale, in the event that a visitor
decided, at the last minute, to spend the night.
It was typical of her. She was the type to prepare for surprises, good and bad. If she found a skirt or a purse
she liked she bought two. She kept the bonuses from her job in a separate bank account in her name. It hadn't bothered
him. His own mother had fallen to pieces when his father died, abandoning the house he grew up in and moving back
to Calcutta, leaving Shukumar to settle it all. He liked that Shoba was different. It astonished him, her capacity
to think ahead. When she used to do the shopping, the pantry was always stocked with extra bottles of olive and
corn oil, depending on whether they were cooking Italian or Indian. There were endless boxes of pasta in all shapes
and colors, zippered sacks of basmati rice, whole sides of lambs and goats from the Muslim butchers at Haymarket,
chopped up and frozen in endless plastic bags. Every other Saturday they wound through the maze of stalls Shukumar
eventually knew by heart. He watched in disbelief as she bought more food, trailing behind her with canvas bags
as she pushed through the crowd, arguing under the morning sun with boys too young to shave but already missing
teeth, who twisted up brown paper bags of artichokes, plums, gingerroot, and yams, and dropped them on their scales,
and tossed them to Shoba one by one. She didn't mind being jostled, even when she was pregnant. She was tall, and
broad-shouldered, with hips that her obstetrician assured her were made for childbearing. During the drive back
home, as the car curved along the Charles, they invariably marveled at how much food they'd bought.
It never went to waste. When friends dropped by, Shoba would throw together meals that appeared to have taken half
a day to prepare, from things she had frozen and bottled, not cheap things in tins but peppers she had marinated
herself with rosemary, and chutneys that she cooked on Sundays, stirring boiling pots of tomatoes and prunes. Her
labeled mason jars lined the shelves of the kitchen, in endless sealed pyramids, enough, they'd agreed, to last
for their grandchildren to taste. They'd eaten it all by now. Shukumar had been going through their supplies steadily,
preparing meals for the two of them, measuring out cupfuls of rice, defrosting bags of meat day after day. He combed
through her cookbooks every afternoon, following her penciled instructions to use two teaspoons of ground coriander
seeds instead of one, or red lentils instead of yellow. Each of the recipes was dated, telling the first time they
had eaten the dish together. April 2, cauliflower with fennel. January 14, chicken with almonds and sultanas. He
had no memory of eating those meals, and yet there they were, recorded in her neat proofreader's hand. Shukumar
enjoyed cooking now. It was the one thing that made him feel productive. If it weren't for him, he knew, Shoba
would eat a bowl of cereal for her dinner.
Tonight, with no lights, they would have to eat together. For months now they'd served themselves from the stove,
and he'd taken his plate into his study, letting the meal grow cold on his desk before shoving it into his mouth
without pause, while Shoba took her plate to the living room and watched game shows, or proofread files with her
arsenal of colored pencils at hand.
At some point in the evening she visited him. When he heard her approach he would put away his novel and begin
typing sentences. She would rest her hands on his shoulders and stare with him into the blue glow of the computer
screen. "Don't work too hard," she would say after a minute or two, and head off to bed. It was the one
time in the day she sought him out, and yet he'd come to dread it. He knew it was something she forced herself
to do. She would look around the walls of the room, which they had decorated together last summer with a border
of marching ducks and rabbits playing trumpets and drums. By the end of August there was a cherry crib under the
window, a white changing table with mint-green knobs, and a rocking chair with checkered cushions. Shukumar had
disassembled it all before bringing Shoba back from the hospital, scraping off the rabbits and ducks with a spatula.
For some reason the room did not haunt him the way it haunted Shoba. In January, when he stopped working at his
carrel in the library, he set up his desk there deliberately, partly because the room soothed him, and partly because
it was a place Shoba
avoided.
Shukumar returned to the kitchen and began to open drawers. He tried to locate a candle among the scissors, the
eggbeaters and whisks, the mortar and pestle she'd bought in a bazaar in Calcutta, and used to pound garlic cloves
and cardamom pods, back when she used to cook. He found a flashlight, but no batteries, and a half-empty box of
birthday candles. Shoba had thrown him a surprise birthday party last May. One hundred and twenty people had crammed
into the house — all the friends and the friends of friends they now systematically avoided. Bottles of vinho verde
had nested in a bed of ice in the bathtub. Shoba was in her fifth month, drinking ginger ale from a martini glass.
She had made a vanilla cream cake with custard and spun sugar. All night she kept Shukumar's long fingers linked
with hers as they walked among the guests at the party.
Since September their only guest had been Shoba's mother. She came from Arizona and stayed with them for two months
after Shoba returned from the hospital. She cooked dinner every night, drove herself to the supermarket, washed
their clothes, put them away. She was a religious woman. She set up a small shrine, a framed picture of a lavender-faced
goddess and a plate of marigold petals, on the bedside table in the guest room, and prayed twice a day for healthy
grandchildren in the future. She was polite to Shukumar without being friendly. She folded his sweaters with an
expertise she had learned from her job in a department store. She replaced a missing button on his winter coat
and knit him a beige and brown scarf, presenting it to him without the least bit of ceremony, as if he had only
dropped it and hadn't noticed. She never talked to him about Shoba; once, when he mentioned the baby's death, she
looked up from her knitting, and said, "But you weren't even there."
It struck him as odd that there were no real candles in the house. That Shoba hadn't prepared for such an ordinary
emergency. He looked now for something to put the birthday candles in and settled on the soil of a potted ivy that
normally sat on the windowsill over the sink. Even though the plant was inches from the tap, the soil was so dry
that he had to water it first before the candles would stand straight. He pushed aside the things on the kitchen
table, the piles of mail, the unread library books. He remembered their first meals there, when they were so thrilled
to be married, to be living together in the same house at last, that they would just reach for each other foolishly,
more eager to make love than to eat. He put down two embroidered place mats, a wedding gift from an uncle in Lucknow,
and set out the plates and wineglasses they usually saved for guests. He put the ivy in the middle, the white-edged,
star-shaped leaves girded by ten little candles. He switched on the digital clock radio and tuned it to a jazz
station.
"What's all this?" Shoba said when she came downstairs. Her hair was wrapped in a thick white towel.
She undid the towel and draped it over a chair, allowing her hair, damp and dark, to fall across her back. As she
walked absently toward the stove she took out a few tangles with her fingers. She wore a clean pair of sweatpants,
a T-shirt, an old flannel robe. Her stomach was flat again, her waist narrow before the flare of her hips, the
belt of the robe tied in a floppy knot.
It was nearly eight. Shukumar put the rice on the table and the lentils from the night before into the microwave
oven, punching the numbers on the timer.
"You made rogan josh," Shoba observed, looking through the glass lid at the bright paprika stew.
Shukumar took out a piece of lamb, pinching it quickly between his fingers so as not to scald himself. He prodded
a larger piece with a serving spoon to make sure the meat slipped easily from the bone. "It's ready,"
he announced.
The microwave had just beeped when the lights went out, and the music disappeared.
"Perfect timing," Shoba said.
"All I could find were birthday candles." He lit up the ivy, keeping the rest of the candles and a book
of matches by his plate.
"It doesn't matter," she said, running a finger along the stem of her wineglass. "It looks lovely."
In the dimness, he knew how she sat, a bit forward in her chair, ankles crossed against the lowest rung, left elbow
on the table. During his search for the candles, Shukumar had found a bottle of wine in a crate he had thought
was empty. He clamped the bottle between his knees while he turned in the corkscrew. He worried about spilling,
and so he picked up the glasses and held them close to his lap while he filled them. They served themselves, stirring
the rice with their forks, squinting as they extracted bay leaves and cloves from the stew. Every few minutes Shukumar
lit a few more birthday candles and drove them into the soil of the pot.
"It's like India," Shoba said, watching him tend his makeshift candelabra. "Sometimes the current
disappears for hours at a stretch. I once had to attend an entire rice ceremony in the dark. The baby just cried
and cried. It must have been so hot."
Their baby had never cried, Shukumar considered. Their baby would never have a rice ceremony, even though Shoba
had already made the guest list, and decided on which of her three brothers she was going to ask to feed the child
its first taste of solid food, at six months if it was a boy, seven if it was a girl.
"Are you hot?" he asked her. He pushed the blazing ivy pot to the other end of the table, closer to the
piles of books and mail, making it even more difficult for them to see each other. He was suddenly irritated that
he couldn't go upstairs and sit in front of the computer.
"No. It's delicious," she said, tapping her plate with her fork. "It really is."
He refilled the wine in her glass. She thanked him.
They weren't like this before. Now he had to struggle to say something that interested her, something that made
her look up from her plate, or from her proofreading files. Eventually he gave up trying to amuse her. He learned
not to mind the silences.
"I remember during power failures at my grandmother's house, we all had to say something," Shoba continued.
He could barely see her face, but from her tone he knew her eyes were narrowed, as if trying to focus on a distant
object. It was a habit of hers.
"Like what?"
"I don't know. A little poem. A joke. A fact about the world. For some reason my relatives always wanted me
to tell them the names of my friends in America. I don't know why the information was so interesting to them. The
last time I saw my aunt she asked after four girls I went to elementary school with in Tucson. I barely remember
them now."
Shukumar hadn't spent as much time in India as Shoba had. His parents, who settled in New Hampshire, used to go
back without him. The first time he'd gone as an infant he'd nearly died of amoebic dysentery. His father, a nervous
type, was afraid to take him again, in case something were to happen, and left him with his aunt and uncle in Concord.
As a teenager he preferred sailing camp or scooping ice cream during the summers to going to Calcutta. It wasn't
until after his father died, in his last year of college, that the country began to interest him, and he studied
its history from course books as if it were any other subject. He wished now that he had his own childhood story
of India.
"Let's do that," she said suddenly.
"Do what?"
"Say something to each other in the dark."
"Like what? I don't know any jokes."
"No, no jokes." She thought for a minute. "How about telling each other something we've never told
before."
"I used to play this game in high school," Shukumar recalled. "When I got drunk."
"You're thinking of truth or dare. This is different. Okay, I'll start." She took a sip of wine. "The
first time I was alone in your apartment, I looked in your address book to see if you'd written me in. I think
we'd known each other two weeks."
"Where was I?"
"You went to answer the telephone in the other room. It was your mother, and I figured it would be a long
call. I wanted to know if you'd promoted me from the margins of your newspaper."
"Had I?"
"No. But I didn't give up on you. Now it's your turn."
He couldn't think of anything, but Shoba was waiting for him to speak. She hadn't appeared so determined in months.
What was there left to say to her? He thought back to their first meeting, four years earlier at a lecture hall
in Cambridge, where a group of Bengali poets were giving a recital. They'd ended up side by side, on folding wooden
chairs. Shukumar was soon bored; he was unable to decipher the literary diction, and couldn't join the rest of
the audience as they sighed and nodded solemnly after certain phrases. Peering at the newspaper folded in his lap,
he studied the temperatures of cities around the world. Ninety-one degrees in Singapore yesterday, fifty-one in
Stockholm. When he turned his head to the left, he saw a woman next to him making a grocery list on the back of
a folder, and was startled to find that she was beautiful.
"Okay" he said, remembering. "The first time we went out to dinner, to the Portuguese place, I forgot
to tip the waiter. I went back the next morning, found out his name, left money with the manager."
"You went all the way back to Somerville just to tip a waiter?"
"I took a cab."
"Why did you forget to tip the waiter?"
The birthday candles had burned out, but he pictured her face clearly in the dark, the wide tilting eyes, the full
grape-toned lips, the fall at age two from her high chair still visible as a comma on her chin. Each day, Shukumar
noticed, her beauty, which had once overwhelmed him, seemed to fade. The cosmetics that had seemed superfluous
were necessary now, not to improve her but to define her somehow.
"By the end of the meal I had a funny feeling that I might marry you," he said, admitting it to himself
as well as to her for the first time. "It must have distracted me."
The next night Shoba came home earlier than usual. There was lamb left over from the evening before, and Shukumar
heated it up so that they were able to eat by seven. He'd gone out that day, through the melting snow, and bought
a packet of taper candles from the corner store, and batteries to fit the flashlight. He had the candles ready
on the countertop, standing in brass holders shaped like lotuses, but they ate under the glow of the copper-shaded
ceiling lamp that hung over the table.
When they had finished eating, Shukumar was surprised to see that Shoba was stacking her plate on top of his, and
then carrying them over to the sink. He had assumed she would retreat to the living room, behind her barricade
of files.
"Don't worry about the dishes," he said, taking them from her hands.
"It seems silly not to," she replied, pouring a drop of detergent onto a sponge. "It's nearly eight
o'clock."
His heart quickened. All day Shukumar had looked forward to the lights going out. He thought about what Shoba had
said the night before, about looking in his address book. It felt good to remember her as she was then, how bold
yet nervous she'd been when they first met, how hopeful. They stood side by side at the sink, their reflections
fitting together in the frame of the window. It made him shy, the way he felt the first time they stood together
in a mirror. He couldn't recall the last time they'd been photographed. They had stopped attending parties, went
nowhere together. The film in his camera still contained pictures of Shoba, in the yard, when she was pregnant.
After finishing the dishes, they leaned against the counter, drying their hands on either end of a towel. At eight
o'clock the house went black. Shukumar lit the wicks of the candles, impressed by their long, steady flames.
"Let's sit outside," Shoba said. "I think it's warm still."
They each took a candle and sat down on the steps. It seemed strange to be sitting outside with patches of snow
still on the ground. But everyone was out of their houses tonight, the air fresh enough to make people restless.
Screen doors opened and closed. A small parade of neighbors passed by with flashlights.
"We're going to the bookstore to browse," a silver-haired man called out. He was walking with his wife,
a thin woman in a windbreaker, and holding a dog on a leash. They were the Bradfords, and they had tucked a sympathy
card into Shoba and Shukumar's mailbox back in September. "I hear they've got their power."
"They'd better," Shukumar said. "Or you'll be browsing in the dark."
The woman laughed, slipping her arm through the crook of her husband's elbow. "Want to join us?"
"No thanks," Shoba and Shukumar called out together. It surprised Shukumar that his words matched hers.
He wondered what Shoba would tell him in the dark. The worst possibilities had already run through his head. That
she'd had an affair. That she didn't respect him for being thirty-five and still a student. That she blamed him
for being in Baltimore the way her mother did. But he knew those things weren't true. She'd been faithful, as had
he. She believed in him. It was she who had insisted he go to Baltimore. What didn't they know about each other?
He knew she curled her fingers tightly when she slept, that her body twitched during bad dreams. He knew it was
honeydew she favored over cantaloupe. He knew that when they returned from the hospital the first thing she did
when she walked into the house was pick out objects of theirs and toss them into a pile in the hallway: books from
the shelves, plants from the windowsills, paintings from walls, photos from tables, pots and pans that hung from
the hooks over the stove. Shukumar had stepped out of her way, watching as she moved methodically from room to
room. When she was satisfied, she stood there staring at the pile she'd made, her lips drawn back in such distaste
that Shukumar had thought she would spit. Then she'd started to cry.
He began to feel cold as he sat there on the steps. He felt that he needed her to talk first, in order to reciprocate.
"That time when your mother came to visit us," she said finally. "When I said one night that I had
to stay late at work, I went out with Gillian and had a martini."
He looked at her profile, the slender nose, the slightly masculine set of her jaw. He remembered that night well;
eating with his mother, tired from teaching two classes back to back, wishing Shoba were there to say more of the
right things because he came up with only the wrong ones. It had been twelve years since his father had died, and
his mother had come to spend two weeks with him and Shoba, so they could honor his father's memory together. Each
night his mother cooked something his father had liked, but she was too upset to eat the dishes herself, and her
eyes would well up as Shoba stroked her hand. "It's so touching," Shoba had said to him at the time.
Now he pictured Shoba with Gillian, in a bar with striped velvet sofas, the one they used to go to after the movies,
making sure she got her extra olive, asking Gillian for a cigarette. He imagined her complaining, and Gillian sympathizing
about visits from in-laws. It was Gillian who had driven Shoba to the hospital.
"Your turn," she said, stopping his thoughts.
At the end of their street Shukumar heard sounds of a drill and the electricians shouting over it. He looked at
the darkened facades of the houses lining the street. Candles glowed in the windows of one. In spite of the warmth,
smoke rose from the chimney.
"I cheated on my Oriental Civilization exam in college," he said. "It was my last semester, my last
set of exams. My father had died a few months before. I could see the blue book of the guy next to me. He was an
American guy, a maniac. He knew Urdu and Sanskrit. I couldn't remember if the verse we had to identify was an example
of a ghazal or not. I looked at his answer and copied it down."
It had happened over fifteen years ago. He felt relief now, having told her.
She turned to him, looking not at his face, but at his shoes — old moccasins he wore as if they were slippers,
the leather at the back permanently flattened. He wondered if it bothered her, what he'd said. She took his hand
and pressed it. "You didn't have to tell me why you did it," she said, moving closer to him.
They sat together until nine o'clock, when the lights came on. They heard some people across the street clapping
from their porch, and televisions being turned on. The Bradfords walked back down the street, eating ice-cream
cones and waving. Shoba and Shukumar waved back. Then they stood up, his hand still in hers, and went inside.
Somehow, without saying anything, it had turned into this. Into an exchange of confessions — the little ways they'd
hurt or disappointed each other, and themselves. The following day Shukumar thought for hours about what to say
to her. He was torn between admitting that he once ripped out a photo of a woman in one of the fashion magazines
she used to subscribe to and carried it in his books for a week, or saying that he really hadn't lost the sweater-vest
she bought him for their third wedding anniversary but had exchanged it for cash at Filene's, and that he had gotten
drunk alone in the middle of the day at a hotel bar. For their first anniversary, Shoba had cooked a ten-course
dinner just for him. The vest depressed him. "My wife gave me a sweater-vest for our anniversary," he
complained to the bartender, his head heavy with cognac. "What do you expect?" the bartender had replied.
"You're married."
"India is an inescapable presence in this strong first collection's nine polished and resonant tales, most
of which have appeared in The New Yorker and other publications."
--Kirkus Reviews
"Lahiri's touch is delicate yet assured, leaving no room for flubbed notes or forced epiphanies."
--The Los Angeles Times
"[Lahiri] announces herself as a wonderfully distinctive new voice. Indeed, Ms. Lahiri's prose is so eloquent
and assured that the reader easily forgets the 'Interpreter of Maladies' is a young writer's first book...Ms. Lahiri
chronicles her characters' lives with both objectivity and compassion while charting the emotional temperature
of their lives with tactile precision. She is a writer of uncommon elegance and poise, and with 'Interpreter of
Maldies' she has made a precocious debut."
--The New York Times
"Lahiri's touch in these nine tales is delicate, but her observations remain damningly accurate, and her bittersweet
stories are unhampered by nostalgia..."
--Publishers Weekly
"[S]torytelling of surpassing kindness and skill."
--The San Francisco Chronicle
"Dazzling writing, an easy-to-carry paperback format and a budget-respecting price tag of $12: Jhumpa Lahiri's
Interpreter of Maladies possesses these three qualities, making it my book of choice this summer every time someone
asks for a recommendation...Simply put, Lahiri displays a remarkable maturity and ability to imagine other lives...[E]ach
story offers something special. Jhumpa Lahiri's Interpreter of Maladies will reward readers."
--USA Today
"In Lahiri's sympathetic tales, the pang of disappointment turns into a sudden hunger to know more...Lahiri's
achievement is something like Twinkle's. She breathes unpredictable life into the page, and the reader finishes
each story reseduced, wishing he could spend a whole novel with its characters. There is nothing accidental about
her success; her plots are as elegantly constructed as a fine proof in mathematics. To use the word Sanjeev eventually
applies to Twinkle, Lahiri is 'wow.'"
--The New York Times Review of Books
Houghton Mifflin Company Web Site, April, 2001
Navigating between the Indian traditions they've inherited and the baffling new world, the characters in Jhumpa
Lahiri's elegant, touching stories seek love beyond the barriers of culture and generations. In "A Temporary
Matter," published in The New Yorker, a young Indian-American couple faces the heartbreak of a stillborn birth
while their Boston neighborhood copes with a nightly blackout. In the title story, an interpreter guides an American
family through the India of their ancestors and hears an astonishing confession. Lahiri writes with deft cultural
insight reminiscent of Anita Desai and a nuanced depth that recalls Mavis Gallant. She is an important and powerful
new voice.
A Temporary Matter
When Mr. Pirzada Came To Dine
Interpreter Of Maladies
A Real Durwan
Sexy
Mrs. Sen's
This Blessed House
The Treatment Of Bibi Haldar
The Third and Final Continent
|