{"id":2894,"date":"2017-03-23T19:23:24","date_gmt":"2017-03-23T13:53:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/fableandi.com\/?p=2894"},"modified":"2024-02-03T09:44:32","modified_gmt":"2024-02-03T04:14:32","slug":"things-found-autopsy-kuzhali-manickavel","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.thebooksatchel.com\/things-found-autopsy-kuzhali-manickavel\/","title":{"rendered":"Things We Found During the Autopsy by Kuzhali Manickavel – Eccentric, Dark and Experimental"},"content":{"rendered":"
Short experimental fiction from Kuzhali Manickavel about dragons, angels, vomit, Pazhani, sexuality, western dances, whores, white people etc.<\/p>\n
This is a difficult book to review because the stories in the collection are very different from each other. Some have no definitive endings, some stories reek of magical realism and are wonderfully original and imaginative and some are realistic with razor sharp words. Let\u2019s take an example of the title story, Things we found during an Autopsy<\/em>. Some friends conduct an autopsy of an unnamed girl. They find a\u00a0Playboy<\/em>\u00a0magazine hidden behind her jaw, black ants floating through her skin, angels nested behind her heart that had to be pulled out with tweezers, St. Sebastian tied to her spine, typhoid in her liver, and a copy of\u00a0Playgirl<\/em>\u00a0magazine, spread across her ribs. The friends think this means that she must have been conflicted about her sexuality and they \u2018could have been the awesome friends who held her hand while they dragged her out of the closet.\u2019<\/p>\n The writing breaks all rules about language and many stories have exceptionally long titles. The characters in the stories are given names like Clubfoot, Gum Chewer and Pepsi girl; names that give an idea of what the character might be like without unnecessary descriptions. The importance of having a minty-fresh-export-quality aadi velli special non-cola cola in the tropicool icy-land urban indian slum<\/em> breaks the conventions of grammar and punctuation. Kuzhali does not shy away from describing not-so-pleasant scenes (such as vomit, or a raft made of bodies of prostitutes) and does so in a very interesting and different way.<\/p>\n There are some stories I liked more than the others. The Twins<\/em> is the story of twins being passed on from generation to generation, reminiscent of family heirlooms that may not be beneficial but are always hard to let go. \u00a0Asheaters<\/em> is a flash fiction that sums up traditional beliefs, modern beliefs and uncertainty of fate. Three Scenarios Leading to the Rape of a Teenage Girl in the Tropicool Icy-Land Urban Indian Slum<\/em> \u00a0tells about three girls, with different personal backgrounds, ending in the same fate. Whore<\/em> is about sexual assaults that women face on a daily basis; it reads \u201c \u2026you are whispering ‘sexy whore’ into the back of my neck.. You will have a scrubbed face, white teeth and clean hands. This will make me think it couldn\u2019t have been you. I will look for men who are dark and dirty with red eyes.<\/em>\u201d The story further talks about how women are forced to dress in a certain way because the eyes of the society are always upon the girl and never the man. The Good Place, <\/em>which reminded me of Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s The Man with Enoromous Wings,<\/em>\u00a0talks about an angel in glass bottle and the characters can\u2019t decide whether to sell it or use it as a paperweight or a decorative item. The Statue Game<\/em> is about how to dispose a weird statue of Krishna since it is forbidden to throw away statues of gods.<\/p>\n