A Matter of Time
By Shashi Deshpande. Feminist Press at the CUNY, 1999.
Reviewed by Sudha S. Balagopal
I first read a A Matter of Time a few years ago, when it was
published in India. The book made a deep impression on me, with its sensitive
story of rebuilding and hope. After its more recent release in the US,
I read it again, enjoying it even more.Very few books can lay claim to
that fact for me.
In A Matter of Time, a father, named Gopal, with three almost-grown
girls, decides he has had enough of marriage and its binding ties, and
walks out on his family. In a culture where marriage, to many, is the be-all
and end-all of existence, where responsibilities outweigh desires, this
expression to be free of all bondage in itself is strange and different
to say the least (unless of course, it is for spiritual reasons).
Sumi, Gopal’s wife, and his three daughters, seek shelter with her parents.
Coincidentally, Sumi's parents themselves have a relationship that
is more than strained. They are husband and wife in name only, inhabiting
the same house with virtually no communication between the two of them.
The three girls, Aru, Charu and Seema are bewildered and adrift. They
all want normalcy. But what is normalcy once a father has walked out on
his family? Sumi, the mother, is extraordinarily collected, to the point
of indifference. How they learn to cope with this dislocation is the story
that Deshpande spins for her readers. Ofcourse this is not the only story-it
is also the story of all the families that are intimately linked to Sumi's.
The one problem I had with A Matter of Time was the abrupt introduction
of characters. Deshpande does not describe how some of the people are related
to the main character as they come into the picture. In the beginning,
I had a problem sorting out the various relationships. And in this I do
not mean the central family of Sumi, Gopal and their three daughters. It
is all the other family members: the cousins, their children, Gopal’s nephew
and his wife and their children, the grandparents’ tenants and a host of
others. It is said in India that when you marry a man you marry his whole
family. It is the same with Deshpande’s book, where the reader is forced
to accept Sumi and her entire clan, including the complex network of her
relatives and well-wishers.
That fact apart, Deshpande’s characters develop as you read on. The
inner workings of a family are examined so clearly, making me see my own
family in many parts of the book. The book is also a mirror of a society
in transition. The change in Indian society is skillfully elaborated through
the different generations in this book; the grandmother Kalyani who is
not really educated, Sumi who is educated but doesn’t work outside the
home, Sumi’s sister Premi who is a successful doctor, and the young girls
Aru, Charu and Seema, who all aspire for careers and independence. The
old and the new co-exist in a family that is modern, but with certain old
values.
With a style that is lilting and gentle, Deshpande draws us into an
intricate web of family relationships, without passing judgement on any
other characters' deeds. For the reader, however, there is no escaping
the clutches of emotion or feeling.
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