StoriesPurabi Banerjee COME BACK MY MASTER AND OTHER STORIES By K.S. Duggal Vikas Publishing House, New Delhi, 1979, pp. 252, Rs. 35.00 SWORD & ABYSS: A COLLECTION OF SHORT STORIES By Keki N. Daruwalla Vikas Publishing House, New Delhi, 1979, pp. 137, Rs. 25.00 VOLUME III NUMBER 3 November/December 1978 In his preface K.S. Duggal feels that
the short story is a product of the twentieth century. It was born during the
first World War, and ‘the subsequent period of distrust and dislocation of
accepted norms of daily life fostered it.’ Rather a negative way of looking at
it—surely there were other reasons in the twentieth century which made it
favourable for the short story to emerge. The increasing complexity of the
pattern of living which made it impossible for one to read long novels, the
appearance of periodicals which offered scope to the novelist to write serially
to start with and then to the short story writer, there were a number of
factors which were responsible for the rise of the short story. So, the credit
should not go entirely to the wars.
How does one judge a short story? Most
readers assess it by the same criteria as a novel, not realizing that it is a
different literary form and should be judged accordingly. If a novel is like a
painting, the short story is like a sketch—a few deft strokes and the picture
is ready. It is for the reader to fill in the details with his imagination. If
the writer succeeds in firing his imagination, he is a good story writer.
Does Kartar Singh Duggal succeed in
appealing to the reader's imagination? Though a few readers might find him a
trifle too earthy and lacking in finesse, some of his stories are rather good.
Originally written in Punjabi most of them have not lost their flavour in
translation. An Indian writing in English is often faced with a grave problem.
He writes about Indians and so he finds it difficult to communicate their
experiences, their conversation in a language which they do not speak all the
time. The end product is neither here nor there. In Duggal's case, some of the
stories do appear a bit wooden in translation, like 'Rickshawala', 'Rain God and the Radio', but there are
others which do not seem to have lost any of their pep, or pathos or whatever
gives them their poignancy. 'The Night
of the Full Moon', 'Lali', 'The Letter Comes', 'The Man in White'—these are examples of stories
in the book which appeal because of their spontaneity.
It is mainly the world of the peasant and it is ... Table of Contents >> |