If I could tell you
Soumya Bhattacharya
Speaking Tiger
INR 399/
This is the story of a father and his beloved little daughter – at least it starts that way with Oishi, whose name means ‘divine’ in Bengali and ‘delicious’ in Japanese, though the necessity for Japanese never becomes relevant to the story. Bhattacharya in his never overtly poetic prose describes the adorable babyness of the narrator’s little daughter, the translucent skin of her rotund stomach and how he and his wife drool over her through her growing days. We never know the name of the narrator but discover that he is Bengali, orphaned in a plane crash and brought up by his father’s friend in Mumbai. He wants to be a writer and follows the careers of Naipaul, Rushdie and the rest, hoping to break into the literary world in a wave of glory. In this sense, he is like most young people and since he has enough money, he chooses to work at that rather than anything paying, relying on the stock market to keep him supplied with funds.