| TurboBookSnob Review |
The
White Tiger is a tale of a modern India of call centres and
entrepreneurialism. This India goes beyond the India of Paul
Theroux, Arundhati
Roy, or even Salman
Rushdie. It is the India created by off-shoring and globalisation.
Balram
Halwai narrates the story in this novel, and does so in the form
of correspondence to a Mr. Jiabao, who is the premier of China .
Balram is a self-made man, and he wants Mr. Jiabao (and the reader)
to be aware of his status as an entrepreneur, hoping that the Chinese
man will learn more about the “real” India from his letters, rather
than learning from the formal events conducted for him by India
's government. As the blades of his plastic chandelier turn in his
small office, Balram spends his evenings telling the Chinese premier
about his life and his India , while working as an outsourced vendor
for American companies.
Balram
comes from a poor village, where the extended family lives together
under one roof with their beloved water buffalo, which is fed and
nurtured prior to any human family member. In this village, Balram
learns about the harsh facts of poverty and about government corruption,
which is used each year to “buy” the votes of the poor villagers.
Balram
describes his village to the premier:
“Your
Excellency, I am proud to inform you that Laxmangarh is your typical
Indian village paradise, adequately supplied with electricity,
running water, and working telephones; and that the children of
my village, raised on a nutritious diet of meat, eggs, vegetables,
and lentils, will be found, when examined with tape measure and
scales,, to match up to the minimum height and weight standards
set by the United Nations and other organizations whose treaties
our prime minister has signed and whose forums he so regularly
and pompously attends.
Ha!
Electricity
poles – defunct.
Water
tap – broken.
Children
– too lean and short for their age, and with over-sized heads
from which vivid eyes shine, like the guilty conscience of the
government of India .
Yes,
a typical Indian village paradise, Mr Jiabao. One day I'll have
to come to China and see if your village paradises are any better.”
Balram
learns how to drive, and escapes Laxmangargh by becoming the driver
for the son of a local landlord, Mr. Ashok, and for his wife, Pinky
Madam. Through Balram's eyes, watching his employers, newly returned
from living in America , the east meets the west in a daily comparison
of overt collective consumption. He observes their pettiness, and
the injustice of his situation crystallizes when he is forced to
sign a statement taking the blame for a hit and run accident for
which he was not responsible.
Balram
enacts what must be a fantasy of many of the working class—he killed
his employer and took the man's money, using it to start up a business
of his own driving call centre employees to and from work.
This
novel has a driving and compelling narrative, and Balram possesses
a unique charm, despite his dubious dealings. The subject matter
is current, and the writing is quite good. Whether this is Booker
Prize winning material remains to be seen. |