Arzee the Dwarf
By (Author) Choudhury Chandrahas
HarperCollins Publishers India
HarperCollins Publishers India
6th August 2013
India
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
210
Width 130mm, Height 196mm, Spine 13mm
158g
Set in contemporary Bombay, the streets of which Arzee is always walking, and unfolding over a duration of two weeks, ARZEE THE DWARF is a dark comedy that peeps into the vanishing world of the city's old cinemas and communicates, even through the highly particularized unease of the protagonist, a larger sense of the uncertainty of people left behind in a fast-changing world.
ARZEE tHE DWARF is the story of the doubly marginalized Arzee - a half-Hindu half Muslim midget who works as a projectionist in a decrepit Bombay cinema theatre called Noor. It is about Arzee's extraordinary urge to find an ordinary life. As Arzee curses his stars and retreats from life, he is kept from sinking entirely into a morass of self-pity by a series of encounters - with Deepak the gangster, with old Phiroz, the outgoing head projectionist of the Noor, and his daughter Shireen. He is tormented also by the memory of one set of now-distant days when everything in his life had been beautiful, and he had felt loved and wanted, and no shorter than anyone else. Is there a chance that that time can somehow be resuscitated Or is Arzee about to find that even the few certainties he now possesses are also chimerical
Chandrahas Choudhury grew up in Bombay and his native Orissa, was educated at the Universities of Delhi and Cambridge, and now lives between Delhi and Mumbai. His book reviews appear in the National, The Wall Street Journal, and The New York Times. He is also the editor of the anthology of Indian fiction India: A Traveller's Literary Companion published by HarperCollins.