Good? For what? An Airport Read? Okay - But Not More
First, the home truth: I was...well, let us say...forced to write this and forced to read the book, but - surprise - I was not forced to like it. And that is just what I do or better do not do. I want to say something ahead of all: I do not hate the book at all. I am a very ironic person.
So before I start telling you why I do not like the book that much, we're gonna have a short summary (but not too long, otherwise you'll fall asleep): You guessed it: it is a thrilling story of murder, corruption and violence. But unfortunately it is packed, published and parceled in the most boring setting: India. Thank you Sahib Adiga - no signature, I don't accept that parcel you sent me, I'm sorry, postmarked and back to India.
The plot is as simple as the verbal abilities Aravind shows his readers. Balram Halwai (the run-of-the-mill Indian critter) is some kind of a modern servant - he has a car, you know? Okay, it's not his car. It belongs to his master (a cheer for class society). He is just borrowing it from time to time to feel like the cool guy with the black Ray-Ben. But let's come back to his interesting job of being the driver of Mister Ashok (that's how his masters name seems to be). You will be very close to this job - every night. Chapter for chapter, page for page, you'll have to read about scenery in one of those gorgeously filthy Indian molochs full of dirty lies, corruption and murder. Wonderful, right? Yeah, I just thought the same. That is what students love to read - modern students want to read about modern servants. They love words like "f***", "sl**" or so on appearing again and again. They feel touched - vindicated! They want books to be X-rated and they want the servant to fall into a blood rage, to pull out the knife, smash the bowl over his masters head and kill him; oops, I spoiled your interesting reading experience. It's a mess!
And problem: We all have read this already - sure not the same story and maybe not set in India - but it was all before about crashing poverty, the ugliness, the small trap of a world and the attempt to escape it. Wow, Sahib Adiga, this is really something new.
Okay, that should be enough now. I do not want to push you into my opinion ... what? Huh, I did already? I'm so sorry!
So you want offense language? Murder? Sex? Great, you are just as uncivilized as Aravind Adiga, but allow me one more to say:
This book really defines the word bluff package. It is so promising what you are supposed to see on the covers: dozens of reviews on it, winner of the Booker Prize. What you see is what you get? No, wrong thought! What you see is superimposed on what you might like to get. Personally I was really expecting this would be one of the books I'd find myself thinking about after I'd finished. But now there are just two important questions in my head: (1) "How high does the quality of books has to be to be put on the list of the Man Booker Prize by its committee?" and (2) "How much would a used-bookstore give me for this novel?" The first question is easy to answer: Not too high because the Man Booker Prize is a British invention and they never had a sense of taste. I mean, who is eating pork with mint syrup? Ew! Second question is easy as well: Nothing, I have asked!
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Overview
The white tiger of this novel is Balram Halwai, a poor Indian villager whose great ambition leads him to the zenith of Indian business culture, the world of the Bangalore entrepreneur. On the occasion of the president of China’s impending trip to Bangalore, Balram writes a letter to him describing his transformation and his experience as driver and servant to a wealthy Indian family, which he thinks exemplifies the contradictions and complications of Indian society.
The White Tiger recalls The Death of Vishnu and Bangkok 8 in ambition, scope, and narrative genius, with a mischief and personality all its own. Amoral, irreverent, deeply endearing, and ...