Kalimpong dreaming
The Inheritance of Loss by Kiran Desai Viking/Penguin
Kiran Desai's second novel is set in the Darjeeling hills. It opens in Cho Oyu, a beautiful, crumbling house in Kalimpong, from where a retired judge, his grand-daughter and his beloved dog can see Kanchenjunga, "a far peak whittled out of ice, gathering the last of the light, a plume of snow blown high by the storms at its summit." As the girl reads an old National Geographic, the old man plays chess against himself; and, in the old kitchen, an ancient cook boils water in the kettle, pours milk into an enamel basin for the dog, warms the leftover chocolate pudding for the judge's teatime — all the while dreaming of his own son, Biju, who is now an illegal immigrant in distant New York, scurrying from job to job. Outside, around them all, the mist twists and turns.
What a sweet opening for a novel. The scene is almost cinematic, like Kulu-Manali, as the novel says, or Kashmir in 'pre-terrorist' days, "before gunmen came bounding out and a new kind of film had to be made".