


One Part Woman sold 100,000 copies in India, and Grove’s edition will be his American debut. Summary Perumal Murugan is the star of contemporary Tamil literature, having garnered both critical acclaim and commercial success for his work. But please don't worry, you still have more than 500,000 other books you can enjoy! One Part Woman Perumal Murugan Phone orders min p&p of £1.99.We are sorry! The publisher (or author) gave us the instruction to take down this book from our catalog. Free UK p&p over £10, online orders only.

One Part Woman by Perumal Murugan, translated by Aniruddhan Vasudevan, is published by Pushkin (RRP £9.99). For a book that earned its author death threats and was burned by mobs, One Part Woman is a surprisingly tranquil, sensuous read. Murugan’s unsurpassed ability to capture Tamil speech lays bare the complex organism of the society he adeptly portrays: the double entendres men use towards Kali affirm their own masculinity as much as they mock him women employ their only freedom, the freedom of speech, to put other women in their place and most of all, the unsparing barbs of a judgmental, caste-ridden, patriarchal society alienate a couple longing to be like any other.Īniruddhan Vasudevan’s idiomatic translation preserves the mood of the original, and serves as a constant linguistic reminder that, as readers in English, we are but visitors to this realistic pre-independence Tamil world. In the leadup to its climax, the artful narrative is as frenzied as a religious festival present and past come in and out of focus as if to the cue of loud cymbals. When nothing yields fruit, the couple are advised to participate in the festivities of a local temple: for one night the norms of society are relaxed, all men are deemed gods and women desiring children are permitted to have sex with strangers.

Twelve years of childlessness are accompanied by thousands of temple visits, prayers, offerings. Seen by society as a “barren” woman, Ponna is insulted and excluded by the community, while Kali is goaded to take a second wife. Kali treats her with utmost affection, and has a primal, reflexive desire for her that cannot quite qualify as love. Ponna is a doting, obedient, subservient wife, the kind who comes running at a snap of her husband’s fingers, and who only exists in the Tamil male imagination. The novel, set in 1940s Tamil Nadu, is the story of Ponna and Kali, a farming couple whose happiness is marred by their inability to have a child.
