| A Simple Country Girl Bound in London by Nancy WigstonMonica Ali has made all the "A" lists of Best Young British
Writers this year, kudos following the publication of her first
novel, Brick Lane, a hearty broth of a tale that follows the gradual
assimilation of a young village bride from Bangladesh into the harsh
realities of life in modern London. Readers might be reminded of
the rapturous reception that followed Zadie Smith's White Teeth a
few years back, another look at Britain's new multicultural face.
Whereas Smith had a delicious time sending up the lives of two
unlikely mates, one Brit and one Muslim, their unions and their
kids, writing in a satiric tradition that stretches back to Henry
Fielding, Ali takes a more measured, Dickensian approach in her
portrayal of the lives of London's immigrant Bangladeshis over the
last twenty-odd years.
Brick Lane, her eponymous street in London's East End, has been a
destination for newcomers to England for centuries. On adjacent
Fournier Street, fleeing French Huguenots founded a church, which
later became a synagogue, and is currently a mosque. But long months
pass before young Nazneen, who was "born dead" on the
floor of her parents' hut in rural Bangladesh, can overcome her
timidity and lack of English to leave the apartment in Tower Hamlets
she shares with her arranged- marriage spouse to venture on her own
as far as Brick Lane. Fate resuscitated the infant Nazneen, and she
has bowed to its force ever since. The good daughter, the
subservient-though keenly observant-wife, Nazneen has always accepted
the passive role thrust upon her by her mother. So the scene in
which, propelled by dire news from home about her beautiful,
rebellious younger sister, Hasina, she flees the confines of her
flat is the first of the novel's quiet triumphs. Pregnant with her
first child, her bladder asserts itself, but by now Nazneen is
hopelessly lost in a forest of glass-fronted buildings. A man
approaches, offering help first in Hindi, then Urdu, and finally
in English. "Sorry," Nazneen manages, using up half of
her entire English vocabulary. When he nods solemnly and takes his
leave, we feel this young immigrant has achieved the initial stage
of selfhood. She has spoken and she has been understood.
Nazneen's life in London, as she forges her new identity, resembles
a series of determined baby steps. In contrast, her husband, Chanu,
coasts steadily downward as the book progresses. Initially he seems
little more than a comic blowhard, a man who displays his many
certificates in frames on the wall, while dreaming loudly of the
promotion that is due to him at the council office where he works.
His ultimate goal is to return and live the lordly life in his
native country. Immersed in a world of English literature that
reflects a schoolboy's fantasy, Chanu is ill-suited to current
realities. He has ordered and received a "simple village
girl" as a bride, and is kind enough to her, while expecting
she will perform wifely duties like bearing children and slicing
the corns from his feet. Nazneen does both. Tragically their infant
son dies, but two daughters follow, and Chanu proves a loving father.
Yet he is a powerless man, which becomes glaringly evident when the
news of Hasina's flight from her abusive husband, her impulsive
"love marriage", arrives. Nazneen, frantic with worry,
wants him to go to Dhaka and find her sister. She listens as Chanu
pontificates and delays. "Every particle on her skin prickled
with something more physical than loathing...it was the same feeling
she had when she used to swim in the pond and came up with a leech
stuck to her leg or stomach." In a word, his young wife realizes
her husband is useless. Yet Ali's great achievement is that she
makes this bloated, self-pitying wreck a rounded character for whom
we can't help feel some affection. "He started every new job
with freshly spruced suit and a growing collection of pens...But
he was slighted. By customers, by suppliers, by superiors and
inferiors...There was in the world a great shortage of respect and
Chanu was among the famished."
A great blamer, Chanu quits his job when the longed-for promotion
fails to materialize. His only friend, Dr. Azad, who often comes
to dinner, but because of his own disastrous home life, never invites
Nazeen and Chanu to his own house, counterpoints Chanu's failure.
Their friendship resembles a long jousting match where each scores
points off the other. What Chanu has-a stable family life-Azad
lacks, whereas Azad has the steady income Chanu is unable to achieve.
Part of his chaotic attempt to achieve financial security exposes
his family to the clutches of the nefarious Mrs. Islam, a wealthy
widow and money lender, who arrives, gasping, with her vast bag of
patent medicines, complaining of her health while charging usurious
rates to desperate failures like Chanu. Mrs. Islam reads like an
homage to Charles Dickens, a modern variation on that self-pitying
destroyer, Miss Havisham, in Great Expectations. Except that Mrs.
Islam visits with two enforcers, her dimwit sons.
As time passes, Nazneen changes from a shrewd, yet passive watcher
of English life to a keen participant. Money is short. Karim arrives
at her house with piece work for her to sew. This handsome, politically
engag middleman for his father, who owns a clothing factory, arouses
passion in her life for the first time. Their affair may be part
of the reason we begin to pity her useless husband, although Chanu's
corns, floppy stomach, and endless verbiage consistently mirror his
shortcomings. Readers will grasp the similarities between husband
and lover before Nazneen does; they are both blamers and dreamers,
talkers whose ambitions will never bear fruit. As the housing estate
moves into the politically charged present, with racist violence,
hard drug use, the rise of religious fundamentalism, and the fallout
from the horrors of September 11th, Nazneen's own life-and the lives
of her two, very credible, London-raised daughters-moves toward its
private crisis as Chanu decides to act on his dream and take his
family back to Bangladesh.
Throughout the novel the stream of letters from her sister-sometimes
whole chapters in length-has kept us abreast of the reality of life
in Dhaka, especially for a woman trying to make her way alone. These
letters form a kind of complementary narrative. Set against the
troubles of London life, we see the social conditions back home,
where women are even more helpless to control their lives. Carefully
larded with grammar errors, they still can seem rather too detailed
and Clarissa-like in their novelish descriptions of the travails
of Hasina's life, yet they work, along with Nazneen's vivid memories
of her mother's life and her own childhood, to present a complete
portrait of this woman, caught between present and past, old world
and new. Despite all the flak taking place outside in the streets,
this is a novel firmly set in interior spaces, both in London and
in Dhaka. We become so familiar with Nazneen's flat that we could
draw it from memory. Ali expertly manages to keep us in suspense
about what is going to happen to the lives in that flat until almost
the final page. Brick Lane fairly pulsates with vivid, finely drawn
characters, caught in the swirling maelstrom of life as we are now
compelled to live it.
|