Product Description
Called "a Buddhist Chekhov" by the San Francisco Chronicle,
Samrat Upadhyay's writing has been praised by Amitav Ghosh and
Suketu Mehta, and compared with the work of Akhil Sharma and
Jhumpa Lahiri.Upadhyay's new novel, Buddha's Orphans, uses
Nepal's political upheavals of the past century as a backdrop to
the story of an orphan boy, Raja, and the girl he is ed to
love, Nilu, a daughter of privilege.Their love story scandalizes
both families and takes readers through time and across the
globe, through the loss of and search for children, and through
several generations, hinting that perhaps old bends can, in fact,
be righted in future branches of a family tree.Buddha's Orphans
is a novel permeated with the sense of how we are irreparably
connected to the mothers who birthed us and of the way events of
the past, even those we are ignorant of, inevitably haunt the
present. But most of all it is an engrossing, unconventional love
story and a seductive and transporting read.
A Q&A with Samrat Upadhyay, Author of Buddha's Orphans
Q: Buddha's Orphans feels like a very different novel from your
first one, The Guru of Love, in terms of both its structure and
its subject matter. What motivated you to write this book?
A: The Guru of Love had been a strictly chronological affair,
with a plot structure that was linear and uncomplicated, and with
three characters around which the story revolved. It was the
perfect tale for a first-time novelist. But for my second novel I
wanted something more challenging, something that'd use the
capacity of the novel form to stretch our conventional notions of
time, especially in relation to Nepali history. In retrospect, it
seems that I wanted to demonstrate that our lives are intertwined
with lives from the past, that "life repeats itself," if you
will. Buddha's Orphans covers half a century of Nepali history,
with characters across generations whose lives are intertwined in
inexplicable ways.
Q: Is Buddha's Orphans your most complex work?
A: It certainly felt that way when I finished writing it. This
novel is the most challenging work that I've done, in terms of
subject matter and narrative structure. The first draft was close
to eight hundred pages! And I was completely exhausted by the end
of it, so much so that I thought I'd not write for another year
or two. It turned out I couldn't stay away for more than a couple
of months.
Q: The love affair between Raja and Nilu is moving and has the
feel of spanning generations. Could you talk about these two
protagonists?
A: The character of Raja appeared to me well before I started
writing, and the novel's opening, showing baby Raja abandoned in
the park, was also firmly entrenched in my mind months before I
began. But what turned out to be truly delightful was the
dominant role the character of Nilu assumed by the first quarter
of the novel. This was very much unplanned (I work without plot
outlines), but to me it made the novel, and in the end the book
turned out to be as much about Nilu as about Raja. This pattern
of a female character exerting her influence on events had also
occurred in The Guru of Love, where Goma's challenge to her
husband, Ramchandra, galvanizes the story. In Buddha's Orphans,
too, Nilu takes charge early on, and it's her reaction to the
events in her and Raja's lives, her intuition about how Raja's
unknown past was haunting their present, including their
daughter's, that gives the novel its power.
Q: The hippie period of the 1960s and 1970s in Nepal features
prominently in the novel. Why did you choose those decades?
A: Those were the years when Nepal began fully opening up to
the outside world. I remember as a child walking with my mother
down a popular Kathmandu street--I couldn't have been more than
five or six then--and watching two dreadlocked hippies
French-kissing as they crossed the road at a snail's pace. In a
politically and culturally conservative society, that was quite a
, and my mother was visibly embarrassed. The government was
everywhere, on the billboards in Kathmandu and on Radio Nepal,
which paid homage to the king and the one-party Panchayat system,
it seemed, every hour. I also remember walking with my parents
and my sister, and people commenting on how our nuclear family
matched the family planning slogan of those years: "We two, our
two."
Q: As a Nepali writer living in the West, do you feel that you
have an obligation or a responsibility to tackle major issues of
your home country?
A: I don't feel compelled to be the representative writer of my
home country for the West. The major impetus for my writing is to
try to tell a good story, to keep my readers engaged with my
characters and the story's happenings, and to make them feel, by
the end, that they have caught glimpses into human nature. In the
process, however, I do end up interrogating certain aspects of
the society--for example, the image of Nepali propriety. There's
a tendency in our society to sweep under the rug all those things
that we don't want to admit exist. We blame the West for its
corrupting influences on our culture, as though there's one solid
Nepali culture, pure and pristine, that we need to cling to. I
use my writer's license to peek into my characters' bedrooms, and
I discover interesting things that in public are kept under
wraps. In Buddha's Orphans, Nilu's defiance of her male-dominated
society is one way in which the novel challenges established
thinking.
Q: There's a short section in Buddha's Orphans where Nilu's
daughter Ranjana spends some time in America. Does this signal a
change--will you be using your adopted country more as a setting
for your writing?
A: That's certainly possible. I am finding that I'm
increasingly more interested in a kind of a cross-cultural
analysis in my work, although I doubt whether I'll end up writing
a work of immigrant fiction any time soon. There's still so much
to write about Nepal that I feel that I have just be.
(Photo © Daniel Pickett Photography)