In his 1974 essay, “The World of the Storyteller”, R.K. Narayan recounted the vast family tree of writing that is in every Indian writer’s DNA: the “24,000 stanzas of the
Ramayana, the 100,000 stanzas of the
Mahabharata, and the 18,000 stanzas of the
Bhagavata” (x). In Narayan’s fiction, this sense of history—measured not in years but in eons—is always present, where protagonists assume the time-worn characters of ancient epics, despite professions (printer, tour guide, taxidermist) that seem to mock these ancient pretensions. In a single village we meet incarnations not only of Rama and Ravana, but of the various fools, tricksters, courtesans, and sages that are familiar to every Indian household. As he explains to his Western readers, “the tales have such inexhaustible…
1907 words
Citation: Grasso, Joshua. "The Man-Eater of Malgudi". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 13 January 2022 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=220, accessed 23 November 2024.]