The imagined Bihar

The imagined Bihar

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The first epigraph to Amitava Kumar's Home Products is as good an introduction to the book as any: "An intelligent man cannot turn himself into anything, only a fool can make anything he wants of himself." The two men who lie at the heart of Kumar's narrative are Binod, a journalist who has immense trouble turning himself into any kind of success, and his cousin Rabinder, who thinks far less and does far more.

The protagonists of two recent books, Siddhartha Deb's Surface and Siddharth Chowdhary's Patna Roughcut, were also journalists. These three books share a few other details, as well – they all belong to the Picador stable, for instance, and their settings are far removed from the metropolitan world of most of their readers. In some ways, both the Indian Northeast, where Surface is set, and Bihar, where the other two take place, are counterpoints to the very idea of 'India'. The Northeast is where the idea dissipates into cynicism, while Bihar is where it is magnified into a mockery of itself, with every flaw seen larger than life. In such settings, a journalist brings a critical gaze.

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