Title: A
Calendar too Crowded Author: Sagarika
Chakraborty
Publisher:
Niyogi Books Price: 295
This is the
first book that Sagarika has published despite writing light fiction and poetry
for various online and print media. The subject of the book is women and their
plight in the contemporary society. This in a way matches my work closely as I
am currently touring the country visiting organizations working for women
development. However, while I know the grim reality, I am meeting people who
are trying to better lives and have had excellent achievements too. On the
other hand, many of Sagarika’s stories are grey with no silver lining.
The only wholly
positive example is ‘Selling a Body to Gain a Mind’. Despite the negative
title, it is about breaking the vicious cycle which sucks generations of women
into prostitution. It talks about how the daughter of a commercial sex worker
studies away from the environment and makes something of herself. It is written
in the form of two letters and again stands solitary in this kind of style. While
there are other stories that have a hopeful tenor, it is the only one that
makes you feel good at the end of the story.
The book is an
anthology of stories. Each unit is a month of the calendar and the special days
for women are introduced at the beginning of every chapter. In a few cases, the
stories have corresponded to the days mentioned. But mostly, it is just a
reminder that while life goes on like a chore, there are conferences and
discussions being organised on that plight. An example of synchronization is
the above-mentioned story. ‘Selling a Body to Gain a Mind’ is featured in the
month of April in which April 4 is Anti-Child Prostitution Day in Italy.
While reading
the book, the first few stories appear a little unoriginal. While the words are
hers, the style of capturing the well-known subjects like gender discrimination
etc. isn’t new. The first story especially felt like the general literature on
the topic. However, as you progress through the book, her stories get
captivating. She has addressed a variety of important issues and seems to have covered
an exhaustive list of them. The chauvinistic dictates of society in ‘Behind
those Whispers’ (March) and ‘The Trials of a Nice Girl’ (August) culminate well
in society’s astonishment in ‘The Last Flicker’ (October).
The life of a
mother is viewed with a negative lens in ‘Finding an Ideal Mother for my Unborn
Child’ (January). This clashes harmoniously with ‘Of Jatakarmas and their Stana
Pradidhanas’ (August) which is about the expectations from expectant
mothers and how the pressures of modern lives keep these expectations unmet. As
a short story is usually an intrigue on its own, I am not commenting further on
any story or mentioning the topics of other stories.
The book is a
good read for both men and women. While it is feminist in its outlook, it will
be a study in the more struggling circumstances that women face. As I read a
lot of contemporary and older literature in Hindi, the topics of these short
stories are not new to me. But if you have not read that kind of fiction, this
one is a sound initiator.
A little about
Sagarika:
This Kolkata-born
studied law at National Law University in Jodhpur. She is currently enrolled in
ISB, Hyderabad. She loves Salsa and as mentioned earlier has made a foray into
fiction and poetry earlier. Her research projects have been on varied topics
like corporate governance, monetary economics and religion.
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