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The Siege of Krishnapur by J.G Farrell #ManBooker

seigeJ.G Farrell is a writer whose work I was completely oblivious to until I started on my project to read all the past winners of the Booker Prize.

The Siege of Krishnapur is part of a series of novels known as the Empire Trilogy (the two other titles are Troubles and The Singapore Grip), which deal with the political and human consequences of British colonial rule. The Siege of Krishnapur is based on the real experience of British subjects during the Indian rebellion of 1857 (what has become known as “the Indian Mutiny“).

At first the remote British colonial outpost at Krishnapur is  blissfully unaware of what lies ahead so they continue with their rounds of soirees  and discussions about pseudo scientific concepts like phrenology. By the time news comes of an impending attack it’s too late to flee so these representatives of the British Raj stiffen their sinews, batten down the hatches and wait for relief. Surrounded by beautiful furniture and artwork, and confident in the ability of the Empire to prevail,  the idiots have no idea what it really means to be under siege and the level of deprivation they will endure.  For a time they are able to preserve their Victorian stiff upper lips, the women strive to maintain the social hierarchy and the men posture and preen, joshing about the best way to fire at the Indian attackers – someone has the bizarre idea when ammunition runs out for their cannons, they should fill them with cooking implements  and fire those instead.

But as the weeks turn into months with no relief in sight, the old standards crack in the face of flying musket balls and insects, dwindling supplies of food and dirty water, disease and death,  Religious beliefs are questioned, valuable items of furniture have to be burned; old ideals are challenged. The deterioration is vividly portrayed – the latter stages of the novel are permeated with the smell of rotting bodies (human and animal) and the image of emaciated people. The atmosphere is one of impending doom.

Most of the characters are condescending and racists but Farrell gives us the ability to sympathise with them, particularly with the character of the Collector. He’s a man who is initially presented as a pompous eccentric, a believer in progress who is often found daydreaming of the  the Great Exhibition when he is not admiring his Louis XVI table and books.

 

What an advantage that knowledge can be stored in books! The knowledge lies there like hermetically sealed provisions waiting for the day when you may need a meal. Surely what the Collector was doing as he pored over his military manuals, was proving the superiority of the European way of doing things, of European culture itself. This was a culture so flexible that whatever he needed was there in a book at his elbow. An ordinary sort of man, he could, with the help of an oil-lamp, turn himself into a great military engineer, a bishop, an explorer or a General overnight, if the fancy took him.

By the end he has risen above banalities to become a leader capable of bravery and the common sense lacking in those around him. His eyes have been opened to the true significance of his beloved Exhibition and what it really represented:

He, too, [had] suffered from an occasionally enlightening vision which came to him from the dim past and which he must have suppressed at the time . . . The extraordinary array of chains and fetters, manacles and shackles exhibited by Birmingham for export to America’s slave states, for instance . . . Why had he not thought more about such exhibits? Well, he had never pretended that science and industry were good in themselves, of course . . . They still had to be used correctly. All the same he should have thought a great deal more about what lay behind the exhibits.

Farrell of course is poking fun at the colonial concept with its pretensions and supreme confidence in the Empire’s military and moral superiority. Few of these characters emerge with any dignity yet Farrell makes us feel sympathetic towards them. Much of the novel is witty and funny – hard to achieve given the subject matter but he makes it work.

A well-deserved winner of the Booker Prize in 1973 and one of the best winners I’ve read.

Footnotes

The Book: The Siege of Krishnapur is book number 2 in the Empire Trilogy by J.G Farrell

Published: 1973. My version is a 1993 edition published by Phoenix

Length: 314 pages

The Author: J.G Farrell was born in Liverpool of Irish parents. He was a teacher for many years, combining this with his writing. In 1979, he left London to live in southwestern Ireland. A few months later he was drowned after being swept from the rocks by a rogue wave while angling. He is one of the few authors to have scored a double with the Booker. In 2010 Troubles, which is set against the background of the Irish War of Independence ,was named as the first  (to date the only)  winner of the Lost Booker title – this was a title awarded by a public vote when, because of a change in the award rules, books published in 1970 had not been eligible.

Why I read this: It is part of my Booker Prize project. 

BookerTalk

What do you need to know about me? 1. I'm from Wales which is one of the countries in the UK and must never be confused with England. 2. My life has always revolved around the written and spoken word. I worked as a journalist for nine years then in international corporate communications 3. My tastes in books are eclectic. I love realism and hate science fiction and science fantasy. 4. I am trying to broaden my reading horizons geographically by reading more books in translation

18 thoughts on “The Siege of Krishnapur by J.G Farrell #ManBooker

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  • This has been on my too read list for ages. I think I might even have a secondhand copy i bought a few years ago. I should probably see if I can locate it sometime!

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  • All I knew of Farrell before reading your review was the name – but this does sound quite impressive. I do have the Raj Quartet lurking but my knowledge of the period is fairly limited – have you read the Scott books and if so, how does this compare?

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    • The Raj Quartet is superb – one of my favourite series. It covers a later period than Farrell’s novel (the second world war and run up to Indian independence) and you have probably some broader issues like cross-racial relationships (the first novel deals with a white girl and her love affair with an Indian); the class system among the colonials and Indian soldiers loyalty to the Raj.

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  • I read this years ago and really didn’t like it that much though I can’t remember why. I loved Troubles but haven’t read any more by JG Farnell. Perhaps I should revisit it one day.

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    • It took me a while to get into it. My husband got as far as page 100 and gave up so you’re not alone in disliking it. Troubles was great fun.

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  • Having many Indian children in my class, at least a third, has enriched my life so much. I am much more aware of their culture and so appreciative of them. I have always admired your reading through the Bookers, and now this novel seems especially appealing.

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    • one of the pleasures of my work for the last 17 years has been the interaction with people from different countries so I can certainly appreciate your experience.

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  • This book has been on my list forever and I never pick it up. It sounds like I should. I was worried that it would be an apologists account of the Raj, but sounds like its the opposite.

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  • This is definitely one of my favorites on the Booker list. I especially loved the contrast between so-called civilization and the forces of nature and “uncivilized” cultures. It was rather discouraging that the British snapped right back into their old ways after the siege ended. I’m not sure they learned anything beyond how nice it is to be clean and well-fed. Although maybe that’s enough, if they learned to allow others those privileges.

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    • Good to meet a fellow fan of this book. have you read any of the others in the trilogy? I have yet to get to the Singapore one

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      • No, but I want to read the others! Farrell is excellent and I’m sure they’d be worth squeezing them onto my already bulging To Be Read list.

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  • It’s good, isn’t it? I found it quite disorienting at first—the way it’s written as a straight-faced almost-pastiche, but conceals all of this subversive stuff in its depths…

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    • it was confusing at times – should I laugh or get angry? But gradually his viewpoint became clearer.

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  • Yes, I enjoyed this book and I thought it accomplished two things: exposing colonial pretensions but also showing that people could grow and change when they realised that they were wrong. And that is what the Brits eventually did in the post-colonial era, whereas the French and the Dutch went on fighting to maintain their imperial possessions in Vietnam and Indonesia…

    Reply

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