Sunday, October 12, 2008

Shantaram

Shantaram is the story of Gregory David Roberts, an armed robber and heroin addict, who escaped from Australian prison and came to India. He lived in the Bombay slums, learned Hindi and Marathi, started a free clinic for the slum-dwellers, joined the mafia, procured drugs for foreigners tourists, spent time in Indian prison and fell in love - amongst the others things he did.
It is said that Roberts had to write Shantaram three times because prison guards thrashed the first two versions.

The author's style of writing, is very descriptive - you can actually visualize the sights, smell the scents and feel the change in mood and facial expressions of the characters. Another thing that I like about the book is lines/statements that make you stop and think. Here are a few such lines from what I have jotted down thus far:

  • The past reflects eternally between two mirrors - the bright mirror of words and deeds, and the dark one, full of things we didn't do or say.
  • Sometimes in love, your heart starts to feel like an over-crowded lifeboat. You throw your pride out to keep it afloat, and your self-respect and your independence. After a while you start throwing people out - your friends, everyone you used to know. And its still not enough. The life-boat is still sinking, and you know its going to take you down with it.
  • The future is like anything else that's important. It has to be earned. If we don't earn it, we don't deserve it, we have to live in the present, more or less for ever. Or worse, we have to live in the past.
  • If you could be happy, really happy for a while, but you knew from the start that it would end in sadness, and bring pain afterwards, would you choose to have that happiness or would you avoid it?
  • If you have to ask the question, then you don't have the right to the answer.
  • Often, you have to surrender, before you win.
  • There is another kind of river, the one that runs through every one of us, no matter where we come from, all over the world. It's the river of the heart, and the heart's desire. It's the pure, essential truth of what each one of us is, and can achieve - that is our true nature.
  • If fate doesn't make you laugh, then you just don't get the joke.

Don't be put off by the size of the book. Once you start reading, you will just not feel like putting it down, until you're down with the 900 odd pages.

The Movie: With Mira Nair's direction, Johnny Depp playing the lead and the likes of Amitabh Bachchan and Irfan Khan slated for the cast, the movie would be an interesting one to wait and watch.

2 comments:

  1. *If you could be happy, really happy for a while, but you knew from the start that it would end in sadness, and bring pain afterwards, would you choose to have that happiness or would you avoid it?*

    Good one.. something i have mentioned, rather in a different way... where?... I am writing a book... Ya... may sound silly and stupid :-)

    “Don’t ask what the world needs. Ask what makes you come alive, and go do it. Because what the world needs is people who have come alive.” - Howard Thurman

    It's not only being happy but those things which makes us come *alive* which makes more sense.

    May be it's me who consider more important of being alive, to live every moment whether i am happy or sad bcos *happiness* alone is just another short lived emotion.

    I know(To an extent you know ;-)) i have so many things pending and i really need to catch up with all those things.

    If i can read "Ponniyin selvan" in 3 days i am pretty sure i can complete this book too, if its gonna be impressive...

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  2. You are writing a book? oh wow! this would be another feather in your already fluffy cap :) By that I don't only mean achievements in the eyes of others, but also personal achievements that bring you satisfaction and happiness (even if ... as you put it, happiness is just another short-lived emotion) :)
    So, let this not be like one of those things piling up in your 'drafts' :p

    As for how impressive the book is... its for you to decide. I'm half-way through it and still stand by my initial review.

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