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In a Minor Key

The Caravan

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August 2025

How Cyrus Mistry replaces drama with stillness

- By MANASVI POTE

In a Minor Key

BEFORE CYRUS MISTRY TURNED TO FICTION, his voice first emerged on the stage with a play, Doongaji House, that already carried many of the hallmarks of his later prose: no rousing speeches, no climactic scenes of catharsis. He wrote it in 1977, at 21. It won an award for playwriting the following year but was first performed only in the 1990s. This delay prefigures the kind of reception that would come to define Mistry's work.

Often introduced as the younger brother of novelist Rohinton Mistry, or as one of the few chroniclers of Parsi life in Indian English literature, Cyrus has remained curiously under-discussed in mainstream literary discourse. His novels Chronicle of a Corpse Bearer and The Radiance of Ashes, the novella Passion Flower, the play Percy, and his early theatrical success with Doongaji House, have all received accolades at various points, but little has been written about them as a collective literary vision.

What ties these works together is a stylistic restraint, a quiet politics that resists melodrama and easy resolutions. Mistry's oeuvre offers us literary works stripped of performance. His fiction does not drive us towards moments of epiphany or action. It is shaped by weariness, repetition, omission and delay. The politics lies not in what the story argues but in how it is told.

There is something deliberate about the way Mistry constructs grief—through atmosphere, indicating a steady erosion of spirit. Mistry's prose does not try to transform pain. It simply stays with it, whether it is the weight of a body on a rainy hillside, the silence of a son failing to connect with his mother, or the fading architecture of a once-proud community.

The language for grief is slow, elliptical and textured. In Chronicle of a Corpse Bearer, it is bodily, anchored in caste-based labour surrounding death.

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