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Volu m e II - Purdue University Calumet

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BBC, and a neighbor’s daughter is in the United States working for CNN. But Biju, the disillusioned<br />

product of a different class, struggles to make a living when he leaves India and arrives in the United States.<br />

However, he quickly learns that without money, education, and class to begin with, an Indian may never<br />

find his fortune in the States; or in any other part of the world for that matter.<br />

Of course, Desai could just tell readers about the travels of her characters, but she chooses to take<br />

her readers to most of these places as they are being visited and explored by her characters. This gives life to<br />

the misery and confusion that they experience in other lands so different from India. By bringing these<br />

situations to life using flashbacks, flash-forwards and changes in setting, she makes readers care and feel the<br />

troubling problem of displacement in a real way. Not only does she show readers the transcontinental<br />

spread of a people displaced by colonialism, but she also delves into the dilemma of place, homeland, and<br />

belonging.<br />

Through her narrative, readers become aware of the reality of each character and of the fact that<br />

each of them has felt the effects of post-colonialism; some more than others. By bringing readers into the<br />

homes and lives of the characters separately, Desai shows how these effects are felt differently but intensely.<br />

Gyan’s situation is such that we notice the differences between his upbringing and Sai’s immediately, yet we<br />

also notice the similarity of despair and unhappiness in their current circumstances. Both are poor, but they<br />

suffer differing levels of poverty. Gyan lives in a miserable home that seems on the edge of falling apart in a<br />

poor section of the city of Kalimpong near Cho Oyu. Sai and the judge wear their poverty in a different<br />

way by living on an estate that seems brilliant to Gyan’s eyes but in reality is falling apart. Gyan’s misery<br />

resides in his inability to find a job like so many other Indians. Sai’s unhappiness lies in the absence of a real<br />

parent and the reality of a failed relationship with a young man who leaves her because of his feelings of<br />

inferiority and desire to join the Ghorkha protests. The judge’s wretchedness is rooted in his loneliness; in<br />

his inability to build a relationship with anyone besides his dog, Mutt.<br />

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