One Book Wonders
There are books and then there are wonder books. They are
wonderful as they leave us wondering about the wonders of our world. There are
books we visit once and there are those that we revisit repeatedly. Then there
is the story of a book belonging to an author, as the very act of its
conception and birth springs from the one who writes. But the question is who
rears it. The first pair of eyes which read the book claim a belongingness to
the book which is multiplied with each successive visitation, such that the
more the eyes and minds devour it, the more it grows and becomes equally
theirs. We as readers delight in our readings, are passionate about our books,
we talk, discourse, in course of which we push up the sales and fame of our
reads. Then we could very amicably conclude the argument that the book belongs
equally to the writer and the readers.
The mother and the foster mothers!
In today’s column, I thought we could ponder on all the
books that we as avid readers have reared to top the bestselling charts for
extended periods of time. I would also
like to stipulate a catch here; that is, those writers who wrote just one
wonder book in their lifetime; that very special book, sooooooooooo special
that the creators themselves could not replicate the pattern again and became
legends for one superlative novel. The
ONE BOOK WONDERS!
The reasons for a one–in-lifetime fabulous work of literature could be
many. To start with, it could be the age old truth of human existence;
mortality. To add one more, a writer like Harper Lee said , "I have said what I wanted to say and I will not say it
again." Sometimes it rested with their
nature of being a recluse; the recognition shattered their lives. Last but not
the least the quality of contentment and bliss with just one peak .
The one book wonders or as I call them ‘Phenomenal Books’
have been on my bookshelf and a part of my research and book-reading workshops
over the years. To Kill a Mockingbird
is a Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Harper Lee. A political story about the
trial of a black man in the American South during the depression ; but
essentially a classic because of its depiction of timeless themes of childhood
and innocence. Oscar Wilde’s, The Picture of Dorian Gray is a classic
which begins with the maxim of aestheticism "art for art's sake." He
wrote numerous plays and short stories and an exclusive novel. It is the story
of a man who sells his soul to the devil for eternal youthfulness. An excerpt from the novel was a part of my
English reader in school and I am still haunted by the uncanny ageless youth of
Dorian Gray , frozen in time in contrast to his unseemly deteriorating
portrait. The theme of self- love and a pleasure seeking lifestyle in the book
became recurrent questions during his real life trials brought on by his
homosexual liaisons.
Boris Pasternak’s, Dr. Zhivago exposes the starvation,
cannibalism, murder, reprisals, legitimized slaughters in Russia during an
extended period of the world wars, revolutions, civil war and famines. To be
precise and accurate, the writer expounded on Stalin’s reign of terror and
received a midnight call from Stalin himself, but his garbled explanation did
not interest Stalin and he cut the call. An explosive dynamic novel, that blew
up in his face, simply impossible to translate and further complicated by his
incomprehensible public speeches. A man who was awarded the Nobel Prize for
literature, but he denied it and refused to be exiled to the West. He spent his
entire life translating Shakespeare into Russian.
“I was never more hated than when I tried to be honest. Or
when, even as just now I've tried to articulate exactly what I felt to be the
truth. No one was satisfied” – Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man.
A writer of essays , short stories and book reviews, Ellison wrote the book steeped in the African -American experience. The book was a classic success and he joined the coterie of famed African - American writers with it. The beginning of the book is self- explanatory of the rendering of the invisible man. “I am an invisible man. I am a man of substance, of flesh and bone, fiber and liquids–and I might even be said to possess a mind. I am invisible, simply because people refuse to see me. When they approach me they see only my surroundings, themselves, or figments of their imagination–indeed, everything and anything except me.”
A writer of essays , short stories and book reviews, Ellison wrote the book steeped in the African -American experience. The book was a classic success and he joined the coterie of famed African - American writers with it. The beginning of the book is self- explanatory of the rendering of the invisible man. “I am an invisible man. I am a man of substance, of flesh and bone, fiber and liquids–and I might even be said to possess a mind. I am invisible, simply because people refuse to see me. When they approach me they see only my surroundings, themselves, or figments of their imagination–indeed, everything and anything except me.”
Scarlet O’ Hara the protagonist of Gone with the Wind created ripples. We read her with
censure rather than admiration and sympathy. Margaret Mitchell turned the
tables when she portrayed her as a brave woman who survives the civil war with
hard work and a no nonsense attitude to the whole scene of war. Rhett Butler is
attracted to her in the first place is because of her forthright attitude and
outspokenness. A force to reckon with, who cooked and plotted scenes and was
relentless in her love pursuits but that is what made her human and not just a doll with plastic
well- rehearsed answers and expectations. More recently a novella and a
collection of Margaret’s journal articles have been printed to give a better
insight into her writings.
Arundhati Roy’s The God
of Small Things is her debut, booker prize winner, only novel. A
book that one would wholeheartedly appreciate and but not necessarily like,
bogged by the morbid betrayals of love, politics, religion and family. A
heroine who comes to love by night the man her children love by day.
I would like to leave the readers with a quote
from the book “laws that tell you whom to love, how and how much.”
To end the narrative of one book wonders, I quote ‘Black
Beauty’ by Anna Sewell. A book that Anna bequeathed to the world in the 19th
century, loved and coveted by animal lovers and children alike, a simple but
powerful book about the life of a horse – Black Beauty- with far reaching
ubiquitous messages.
The list would also include books like ‘ Catcher in the
Rye, The Bell Jar, Wuthering Heights,
A Confederacy of Dunces’………………, but maybe I can sign out here and leave the
reader with thoughts and further readings and research.
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