Blurbs that promise oddities – ‘a
manipulative-philanthropist ghost of a chairman’s mother; a footless whore in
Siberia…’ – make one nervous these days. An outlandish cast of characters and wild
leaps of fancy are no longer novelties in modern fiction. But there is a risk that
the fantastical elements plucked out for the back of the book might be the most
interesting thing about it.
Happily, this is not true of Lopa Ghosh’s ‘Revolt of the
Fish Eaters’. The nine stories in this collection are compelling and Ghosh does
deliver on the promise of taking you into a zone of glass towers, elevators,
and recession-struck businesses.
‘The Chairman’s Mother’ tells the fate of a high-flying,
award-winning executive after his dead mother begins to haunt him. She
distracts him from the pursuit of profit by talking incessantly of floods.
‘Siberia’ tells the heartache of a professionally content research analyst
whose school sweetheart has gone off to work in Siberia, and their conversation
is mainly online. ‘Red Shoe’ tells of the encounter between a gritty young
woman who has worked hard to pull herself up the corporate ladder, and a red
pair of sexy heels that can no longer be bought for love or money.
‘Corporate Affairs’ is the most corporate story in this
collection. It tells of a senior executive, an American, who is handing over
his own responsibilities and during the course of a farewell dinner, discovers
the conspiracies that have been brewing behind his back.
‘Richest Man in the World’ is not strictly a tale of the
corporate world. The main protagonist is a slum-dwelling school-girl who is
receiving a computer education at a center run by an NGO, thanks to a very rich
man, while her abandoned mother howls and shouts and turns to black magic.
‘Death by Pineapples’ is the only tale here that
unapologetically dives into magic-realism, for it is set in a plains town that
finds itself overnight transformed into a hill town. It tells the story of a
talented executive who is thrown out of his job for no fault of his, but the
reference to climate change is obvious.
‘The Lockout’ is this reviewer’s personal favourite. This is
the only story that is not just set in the world of corporations and the
conflicts presented to their employees, it most directly reaches for the
gruesome edge of employer-employee relations. What makes it refreshing is that
the story is told as witnessed by the very young daughter of a top manager
dealing with irate workers during a factory lockout. The victim label is hard
to attach and politics doesn’t tip the story off its centre.
The only story that is more politics than business is the
one that lends its title to the collection. It is also the one that offers the
least surprise, the least tension. It attempts to traverse so much terrain –
art, class war, elections, media, love affairs – that the reader is left with
only a hazy impression of its context and purpose.
Overall, these stories are memorable. Ghosh successfully
imprints her protagonists with a human ache, so that their financial and social
drive lies crumpled around their ankles. This, along with a lucid, insistent
narrative style, makes the book a worthy inhabitant of your ‘new writing’
shelf.
Published here.
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