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Extraordinary stories of ordinary lives

Sonal Kohli’s debut short story collection spans three decades in the lives of members of a family that has settled in New Delhi after Partition.

September 25, 2021 / 07:47 IST
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(Representational image) The stories in 'The House Next to the Factory' often spotlight the minutiae of daily life, with characters moving through everyday circumstances, sometimes wondering how they got there.
(Representational image) The stories in 'The House Next to the Factory' often spotlight the minutiae of daily life, with characters moving through everyday circumstances, sometimes wondering how they got there.

Assassinations, riots, the launch of the Internet, liberalisation, stock market swings, and more. In India, the 1980s and the next few decades were eventful, to say the least. How can writers of fiction reflect this in their pages?

One way is to place characters in the thick of the action, involved in or witness to cataclysmic events. Many have done exactly this, in strong voices that capture what it’s like to be caught up in incidents that change lives.

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What’s often passed over is the impact on seemingly average men and women who have to navigate the eddies of political, social and economic changes beyond their ken. Characters who stoically do the best they can with the hands they’ve been dealt.

This is what one finds in Sonal Kohli’s debut work, The House Next to the Factory. Here, a businessman’s ball-bearing workshop is in decline because “even ten years after the government curbed the Sikh extremists in Operation Blue Star, few wanted to have dealings with a company in Punjab”. A private tutor looks at a greasy patch on the road and wonders if it is kerosene used by an incendiary mob. The Harshad Mehta scam turns a family’s “colossal holdings to rubble”. Such events happen offstage and are alluded to almost glancingly; the focus is always on the characters and their aspirations.