The God of Small Things

The God of Small Things

1997 • 344 pages

Ratings133

Average rating3.9

15

I didn't know what this book was gonna be about when I got it but I knew I wanted to read it since I had heard it talked about previously as well as the fact that the setting was for the first time geography and culture that I knew first hand.

I spent a portion of my life in Kottayam and, regardless of whether I asked for it or not, have been steeped in the world this book portrays. This book is very real to me, it's characters, it's setting, its premise. They all comprise of bits and pieces of information I've picked up and experienced through the years forming my picture of the place I grew up and the people I grew up with. The actions, motivations and internal thoughts for these characters are what I've come to understand to be true of the people around me and recently on returning to visit I find that to still be accurate to the point where reading this embarrassed me deeply as though I was being exposed by every new page I read. Offhand comments through the years by people close to me have informed me of the bigotry this book represents as well as the insecurities of the characters it portrays. It reflects such a picture of this place that I'm bewildered that anyone outside of this place can truly understand the depth of this book in how damning it can be at times. But that would assume that these themes aren't universal which I've also learned from leaving this place that they are. Universal. And so I understand how this book, written almost like a Shakespearean tale could cut through the divides and relate to people of its contents.

What struck me most about the book was how it felt as if we were given puzzle pieces without reference and slowly but surely start putting them together until we have the full picture. Reading every page felt like another piece slotting into place.

I'm glad I read this book. I'd recommend it heavily though I'd also understand if it turned another person off due to the dense language and themes as well as the characters, but for everyone else I hope this book excites you as it did me.

January 22, 2019Report this review