Pyre

Pyre

by Perumal Murugan

Narrated by Suvash Mohan

Unabridged — 6 hours, 16 minutes

Pyre

Pyre

by Perumal Murugan

Narrated by Suvash Mohan

Unabridged — 6 hours, 16 minutes

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Overview

'Pyre glows with as much power as [One Part Woman] did, and adds immeasurable value to contemporary Indian literature'-The Hindu

Saroja and Kumaresan are in love. After a hasty wedding, they arrive in Kumaresan's village, harboring a dangerous secret: their marriage is an inter-caste one, likely to upset the village elders should they get to know of it. Kumaresan is naively confident that all will be well. But nothing is further from the truth. Despite the strident denials of the young couple, the villagers strongly suspect that Saroja must belong to a different caste. It is only a matter of time before their suspicions harden into certainty and, outraged, they set about exacting their revenge.

A devastating tale of innocent young love pitted against chilling savagery, Pyre conjures a terrifying vision of intolerance.

Editorial Reviews

Library Journal - Audio

06/01/2022

Murugan's (Resolve) latest features young lovers Saroja and Kumaresan, who sweetly fall in love in the city. Upon marrying, they run away to his village and widowed mother, but Kumaresan significantly underestimates the village's response to his young wife from another caste. Murugan switches effortlessly between the innocence and hope of these two young lovers and the brutal rigidity of the caste system. In addition, he beautifully contrasts the couple's responses to the disaffected mother and village. Narrator Suvash Mohan brings the story to life with his Indian English rhythms and speech patterns, placing listeners inside the book. The singsong rhythm is musical and hypnotic but does not spare listeners from experiencing the deep-seated hatred for "the other." While listeners might wish for more distinction between character voicing, it does not detract from the story. VERDICT Mohan does an excellent job expressing the characters' emotions, adding to the catharsis of the experience.—Laura Trombley

Publishers Weekly

★ 11/08/2021

Murugan (The Story of a Goat) delivers a powerful fable of star-crossed lovers and societal intolerance. Kumaresan, a young man from an isolated village in southern India, works as a deliveryman in a larger town, where he meets and marries Saroja, a leather worker’s daughter. After he brings her to his village, his widowed mother and the rest of the community are outraged that the bride is of a different caste and complexion. Hounded mercilessly, Saroja cowers in her hut and discovers she’s pregnant just as the village council decides to excommunicate the family unless her caste is revealed. Murugan describes rural life in piercing detail, making the everyday toil and inner lives of humble people the backdrop to the unfolding drama of escalating threats from Kumaresan’s relatives and neighbors. The simple, elegant prose of Vasudevan’s translation ranges from poetic (“The day slowly leaned over and fell to the west”) to suspenseful as the hopeful innocence of young love bristles against tradition and Saroja faces increasing danger from the villagers. The author himself was censored in 2014 by government-affiliated activists in India and briefly gave up writing; thankfully, he has returned. Murugan deserves worldwide recognition. Agent: Priya Doraswamy, Lotus Lane Literary. (Feb.)

From the Publisher

Praise for Pyre:

Longlisted for the International Booker Prize

Longlisted for the DSC Prize for South Asian Literature

“An intercaste couple elopes, setting in motion a story of terrifying foreboding. Perumal Murugan is a great anatomist of power and, in particular, of the deep, deforming rot of caste hatred and violence. With flashes of fable, his novel tells a story specific and universal: how flammable are fear and the distrust of others.”—International Booker Prize Judges

“Murugan’s Pyre is haunted by its title—a word that appears nowhere in the novel, but contributes to the growing sense of dread and desperation that shadows it . . . [A] very readable English version by Vasudevan . . . In addition to drawing the reader into Murugan’s Tamil-language environment, Vasudevan also signals the subtle differences in dialect, distinguishing Saroja’s speech from Kumaresan’s. The translation succeeds in reminding the reader of the work’s non-Western, multilingual setting, without compromising the fluency of the narrative.”—Carlos Rojas, New York Times Book Review

“An acclaimed writer in his native India, Murugan skillfully contrasts the young couple’s innocence with the increasingly caustic attacks on their marital union. His spare prose mesmerizes, and Vasudevan’s translation of the original Tamil conveys both meaning and needed context for Western English readers . . . Murugan shows that intolerance, cruelty, and bigotry are universal traits of humankind, even while tailored to the peculiarity of each society. Universal too, are the love, kindness, and familial bonds that exist between individuals who have the sensitivity to look beyond societal custom and coercion. A haunting story of forbidden love set in Southern India that illustrates the cruel consequences of societal intolerance.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

“A powerful fable of star-crossed lovers and societal intolerance . . . Murugan describes rural life in piercing detail . . . The simple, elegant prose of Vasudevan’s translation ranges from poetic to suspenseful . . . Murugan deserves worldwide recognition.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“A Romeo & Juliet fable, centered not on family rivalry but on caste.”—Arts Fuse

“With exquisitely honed details, Murugan vividly exposes society’s blind adherence to draconian traditions.”—Booklist

Praise for Perumal Murugan:

Twice Longlisted for the National Book Award for Translated Literature

"Murugan works his themes with a light hand; they always emanate from his characters, who are endowed with enough contradiction and mystery to keep from devolving into mouthpieces . . . It's not just the physical world Murugan describes so vividly—the way a cow clears its throat, for example—but the rural community, a village of 20 huts and a thousand ancient resentments, where there is no privacy and your neighbor's suffering can serve as your evening's entertainment . . . I'm hoping for a whole shelf of books from this writer." —Parul Sehgal, New York Times, on One Part Woman

"The Story of a Goat, translated from Tamil by N. Kalyan Raman, jumps nimbly from fantasy to realism to parable . . . The effect is not so much escapist fantasy as existential reflection . . . The elegance of Murugan's simple tone will lull you deeper into his story . . . The early scenes of tiny Poonachi wandering in the field and cavorting with other goats are as soft as cashmere . . . Woven through this slim novel is an acidic satire." —Ron Charles, Washington Post

"A major Indian writer . . . Dark currents run through One Part Woman . . . Kali and Ponna, a couple who are erotically wrapped up in each other, withstand waves of derision because they have not conceived a child after a decade of marriage . . . When describing the farming communities of South India, Mr. Murugan is neither sentimental nor harsh." New York Times (profile)

"Intimate and affecting . . . Throughout the novel, Murugan pits the individual against the group. How far you willing to go, he asks, in order to belong? . . . Murugan's descriptions of village life are evocative, but the true pleasure of this book lies in his adept explorations of male and female relationships, and in his unmistakable affection for people who find themselves pitted against the world." —Laila Lalami, New York Times Book Review, on One Part Woman

"This fable of society, bureaucracy, and rural life centers on a Tamil farming couple in South India and the female goat they receive from a mysterious man. The boundaries between human and animal consciousness are blurred as the frail foundling matures under the couple's care, encountering maternal bliss and heartbreak. The small triumphs and tragedies of rural life, such as drought, material wealth, and run-ins with a comically inefficient provincial government, are relayed through the goat's trenchant observations, which poignantly expose how tightly the lives of caretakers and their livestock are bound." New Yorker, on The Story of a Goat

"The title character of Murugan's elegant new novel is indeed a joy . . . Murugan's marvelously observant narrative is equally interested in the visceral daily life of a farm creature . . . The greatest achievement of this remarkable novel is the empathy its adult readers will feel for a non-human creature; through Poonachi's tale we are reminded how much bonds us with the animal world." USA Today, on The Story of a Goat

"Subtly subversive . . . In simple yet lyrical prose, Murugan shows how their standing in the world depends on offspring . . . The novel considers the constraints of tradition and beautifully articulates the couple's intense connection, even without a child." New Yorker, on One Part Woman

"[A] parable about village life, written with breathtaking and deceptive simplicity . . . Murugan traces the entire life of his little goat—her despair, her small acts of heroism, her longing—with Chekhovian clarity. Each sentence in Raman's supple translation is modest, sculpted and clean, but behind each you sense a fund of deep wisdom about the vagaries of the rains, politics, behavior—human and animal." —Parul Sehgal, New York Times, on The Story of a Goat

"A goat's life serves as an allegory for the human condition in this novel from an acclaimed Indian author . . . In anthropomorphizing Poonachi, Murugan finds a path to describe the essence of humans' struggle to survive while grasping for fleeting moments of joy and grace . . . In the tradition of George Orwell's Animal Farm . . . An affecting modern fable reflecting Murugan's enchanting capacity to make a simple story resonate on many levels." Kirkus Reviews (starred review), on The Story of a Goat

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2022-01-26
A young intercaste couple elopes in rural Southern India, braving the anger of their families and the fatal restrictions of society.

Murugan’s novel opens with the just-married Saroja and Kumaresan stepping off a bus in rural Tamil Nadu to walk a mile to Kumaresan’s mother’s home, located in his ancestral village. He instructs Saroja to say nothing of her caste identity, but given her fair complexion, the farming villagers immediately suspect she is not one of them. Despite the taboo against intercaste marriage, Kumaresan believes that they can settle happily there and that his community will eventually embrace the lovely Saroja just as he has. Saroja is a city girl, and her transition to farming life would have been difficult even without the explicit derision and antagonism that the couple experiences from everyone in the village, including Kumaresan’s mother, extended family, and the village leaders. Their naïveté plays against the community’s hatred and cynicism and creates a sense of foreboding that propels the narrative to its inevitable conclusion. An acclaimed writer in his native India, Murugan skillfully contrasts the young couple’s innocence with the increasingly caustic attacks on their marital union. His spare prose mesmerizes, and Vasudevan’s translation of the original Tamil conveys both meaning and needed context for Western English readers. India’s casteism is on full display, but what makes this novel so powerful is how Murugan shows that intolerance, cruelty, and bigotry are universal traits of humankind, even while tailored to the peculiarity of each society. Universal too, are the love, kindness, and familial bonds that exist between individuals who have the sensitivity to look beyond societal custom and coercion.

A haunting story of forbidden love set in Southern India that illustrates the cruel consequences of societal intolerance.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940176074420
Publisher: Penguin Random House
Publication date: 02/15/2022
Edition description: Unabridged
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