Poging GOUD - Vrij

ROAD TO PERDITION

India Today

|

June 20, 2022

In his new novel The Line of Mercy, Tarun Tejpal doesn’t just portray the grim reality of a prison, he dissects the very heart of crime and punishment

- Aman Nath

ROAD TO PERDITION

THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE WAS not plasticine when my generation read it at school. But, by college, we’d begun to play with it like clay, because it seemed less of an imported toy. The question of irreverence to the Queen’s English was catching on when I practised copywriting. But The Line of Mercy by Tarun Tejpal may well be the best bedside reading for the eternal Queen Elizabeth II. She’ll be fascinated with the writer’s facility with a language she must know better but hasn’t dared to make as malleable. Every other line of this opus fills the reader with wonder at the mind of a provincial Chandigarh boy who has married his Naipaul with Dostoevsky and Marquez with Ferlinghetti to create with his bewildering new vocabulary of images a rebellious new highway of e e cummings and goings. No writer I’ve read has been there in language and subject matter.

The story, or rather the cataract of stories, are pivoted inside a prison, weighted by first-hand research because destiny and posterity connived to lock up Tejpal to excavate out of him an epic of woe, spiked with a humour that laughs aloud at itself. Now that 527 pages acquit Tejpal, how will the world stand up in bed for a standing ovation when they read it?

Beyond its soaring scale and scope and its masterful prose, what may be most impressive about Tejpal’s novel is its utter originality. In a publishing landscape awash with crony-and-commerce-hyped books that are tediously banal and derivative,

MEER VERHALEN VAN India Today

India Today

India Today

BRIGHT STAR

Singer-songwriter Aditya Rikhari is among the country's fastest-rising pop musicians

time to read

2 mins

February 23, 2026

India Today

India Today

THE GREAT OPENING UP

A CLUTCH OF NEW AGREEMENTS SIGNAL INDIA'S BOLD BUT RISKY GAMBIT TO JOIN THE BIG LEAGUE OF TRADING NATIONS

time to read

25 mins

February 23, 2026

India Today

India Today

NIRBHAYA OF THE HILLS

IT WOULDN'T SEEM, JUDGING FROM THE crowds gathered near Dehradun's Parade Ground on February 8, that three years had passed since the Ankita Bhandari murder jolted Uttarakhand out of its age of innocence. Or indeed, that the case had run its legal course, resulting in at least one high-profile conviction.

time to read

3 mins

February 23, 2026

India Today

India Today

THE STARS TO BEAT

CRICKET CAME AS A PERFECT FITMENT FOR OUR TIMES—with all the shrinking attention spans and the ever-increasing bloodlust for big hoicks more often.

time to read

1 mins

February 23, 2026

India Today

India Today

A FEUDING ROYALTY

The Mewar royal family's dispute over ancestral properties in Udaipur has resurfaced a year after the death of its last 'custodian' King Arvind Singh. The Delhi High Court is set to rule on the matter that has spanned four decades and countless strained filial relationships

time to read

6 mins

February 23, 2026

India Today

India Today

LOVE STORY WITH A TWIST

BEJOY NAMBIAR'S TU YAA MAIN IS THE LATEST IN A LONG LINE OF CREATURE FEATURES, A GENRE WHOSE APPEAL SEEMS TO BE EVERLASTING

time to read

2 mins

February 23, 2026

India Today

India Today

TABLE TALK

Sunil Kant Munjal's book on Delhi's restaurants, Table for Four, co-written with close friends, reveals a lesser-known facet of the businessperson

time to read

1 min

February 23, 2026

India Today

India Today

TEMPEST OVER A BOOK

Congress attempts to use Gen. M.M. Naravane's unpublished memoirs to call the government to account become a fireball that has singed Parliament

time to read

3 mins

February 23, 2026

India Today

India Today

THE LISTICLE

Upcoming musical performances you should not miss

time to read

1 mins

February 23, 2026

India Today

India Today

The Interpreter of Tongues

THE MULTILINGUAL JHUMPA LAHIRI ON WRITING IN ITALIAN, AND WORKING ON A NEW TRANSLATION OF OVID'S METAMORPHOSES

time to read

3 mins

February 23, 2026

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size