Ratings3
Average rating4.3
The Man-eater of Malgudi revolves around Nataraj, a mild-mannered owner of a small printing press, who leads a contented life with his circle of friends: a poet, a journalist, and Sastri, his assistant. One day, Vasu, a pugnacious taxidermist, moves into Nataraj's house, and soon begins to encroach on his life, scaring away his friends and customers. Nataraj is intimidated by Vasu, but when the taxidermist covets the beloved temple elephant to add to his collection of stuffed hyenas, tigers and pythons, Nataraj rises to the occasion.
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This is the first full length Malgudi novel I have read - there have been a few novellas and of course Malgudi Days, but this one is a little different.
Narayan is able to spend some more time, rounding things out - or maybe dragging things out. The whole time I was reading this I felt like I needed to rush to reach a disclosure, or to get to an important aspect. It is only a relatively short book, and yet I felt compelled to hurry. Perhaps Narayan had too much time to tell his story?
While I enjoyed it (and gave it four stars) I perhaps didn't enjoy it as much as I hoped. I have set it aside in my shelf for a little over a year, watching and waiting, and finally read it, so perhaps I built up my expectations in this manner.
I won't spoil an interesting plot, other than to say, it was certainly not on topic as I had preconceived it. My preconceived expectation of ‘the man-eater' was a story around a tiger, or some other ferocious beast, terrorising Malgudi - but no, it was not this. Instead it is the story of a taxidermist who comes to live in the town, and his effect on Narataj, the printer.
I was interested to see that Narayan dedicated this book to Graham Greene - “to mark (more than) a quarter of a century of friendship”, the man who wisely counselled Narayan to shorten his name to become more manageable for his English audience (from Rasipuram Krishnaswami Iyer Narayanaswami, to RK Narayan).
4 stars.