Dum
Maro Dum: The True Confessions of a Bombaiyya Opium Addict
Set in
pre-liberalisation India (or to be more precise the Bombay of the 1970s before
it became Mumbai and Maximum City), Narcopolis
takes us into a world of dark opium dens redolent with the sickly sweet
scent of dissipation and dissolution. Newly sent away from the Upper East Side,
where he was caught stoned on downers and buying dope, our young man (a Syrian
Christian from the southern state of Kerala like the author himself), finds
himself on Shukla ji Street ‘new to the street and the city, separated by [my]
lack of knowingness’. He finds himself at Rashid’s den where the transvestite
Dimple initiates him to the etiquette of the pipe: of how to hold the pipe in
relation to one’s body in a ‘lunar ebb and pull of smoke that filled first the
lungs and then the veins.’ Discovering the big O boat, ‘sailing on its treacle
tide’, he takes a long pull, settles down on a pallet and prepares to tell his
‘lovely stories’.
Appropriately enough, the
very first chapter opens thus:
‘Before
Dimple came to be called Zeenat, she worked part-time for Rashid and
disappeared every evening to the hijra’s brothel. I smoked at her station even
if other pipes were free, and we talked the way smokers talk, horizontally,
with long pauses, our words so soft they sounded like the incomprehensible
phrases spoken by small children. I asked the usual foolish questions. Is it
better to be a man or a woman? Dimple said: For conversation, better to be a
woman, for everything else, for sex, better to be a man. Then I asked if she
was a man or a woman and she nodded as if it was the first time she’d been
asked…’
What follows is a
pastiche of images and ideas, people dead and living and a narrative that teeters
between morphine-induced hallucinations and the gritty reality of life in the
bylanes of Old Bombay. A somewhat inexplicable interlude in the China of Mao
Tse Tung with references to workers’ centres and people’s revolution makes a
small bump in the otherwise smooth ride on the highway to nowhere. Back in the
backstreets of Bombay, Narcopolis resumes
its heedless mindless journey from one drug-induced fantasy to another, from
one erotic (mis)adventure to the next.
Twenty years later, the
narrator – having introduced us to an eclectic cast of characters comprising
madams, whores, pimps, pushers, poets, eunuchs and the flotsam and jetsam of
the western world that ends up washed ashore in Bombay – settles down, with lit
pipe, to tell the story of a ‘great and broken city’. The telling is important
for it is only in the telling of this story that the past – a strange landscape
that is ‘not fiction or dead history but a place you lived in once and cannot
return to’ -- comes alive once again. A lot has changed in these years; from sailing
the opiate sea of a chandu khana, the
action has moved to harder drugs and harsher people.
Thayil is described by
his publicists as a musician and a performance-poet; I must confess I am
stumped by the latter moniker for I have grown up to believe poets to be second
only to visionaries. This is Thayil’s first foray into long fiction and, again
I must confess, for a first novel it is a clever book, cleverly written, for
clever people. It left me feeling unmoved and, singularly, un-clever.
Also
read:
1.
Maximum
City: Bombay Lost and Found by Suketu Mehta (Random House,
2004), Part-memoir, part-travelogue, an intensely personal look at the city and
its people
2.
Baumgartner’s
Bombay by Anita Desai (Alfred Knopff, 1988): A German Jew flees Europe to find a safe
haven in Bombay where he lives in the company of stray cats
3.
Shantaram
by Gregory Davis Roberts (Abacus, 2005), An escaped Australian bank robber and
drug addict finds a new life in the maw
of Mumbai
This review was first published in The Herald, September 2012.
This is not the book for the wishy washy airy fairy cup-o-chai bourgeoisie reader of Indian writing in English. This is for the connoisseur, one who knows the pipe and the tales of the smoke and mirrors of life. The journey into this Parnassus of quickened, heightened, multiplied consciousness in Narcopolis begins and ends in Bombay, with an exciting interlude in China and a mention of New York. It is a journey on the slow train of transgressions, living vicariously the vicissitudes of its inhabitants slipping djinn-like in and out of opiate tunnels of illumination. Dive in and discover the secrets of Dionysian harmonies.
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