| Format | Availability Status | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Paperback | In stock |
240.00 $ 3.72 |
Imprint: Orient Paperbacks
Publication Date: 02 Jun, 1975
Pages Count: 144 Pages
Weight: 155.00 Grams
Dimensions: 5.00 x 7.75 Inches
Subject Categories:
About the Book:
A novel totally different in tone from all other novels and writings of Arun Joshi. The protagonist, Ratan Rathor, represents the quintessence Everyman - a contrast to other protagonists as his intellectual level is much lower. An unsophisticated youth, jobless, he comes to the city in search of a career, unscrupulous and ready to prostitute himself for professional advancement. Seduced by materialistic values, he takes a bribe to clear a large lot of defective weapons. As a consequence, a brigadier, who is also his friend has to desert his post, and to escape ignomy, commits suicide. A penitent Rathor avoids confessing his guilt but tries to achieve redemption by cleaning the shoes of devotees every morning at a temple.
Arun Joshi's is a peculiar talent and connoisseurs of style will have many things to say about The Apprentice...there is the promise of a new and vigorous personality in Indian fiction.
Here, finally is an English novel by an Indian writer that can be easily said to be one of a class.
Its timbre seems an aural image of the times and conveys its sickness remarkable effectively.
The Apprentice ceases to be a book. It becomes life, and, worst of all, the reader's own secret life of illusions...
There is certainly an impassioned quality in the writing.
Arun Joshi (1939-1993), son of a botanist and an eminent educationist, was born in Varanasi and educated in India and the U.S. After getting his Masters degree in Industrial Management from M.I.T., he returned to India to pursue a career in the corporate world.
Yet writing remained his passion. In the five novels he wrote he spun out some of the most though-provoking and outstanding fiction written in the twentieth century Indian literature and firmly established his credentials as a writer of rare talent and sensitivity.
The Last Labyrinth won him the Sahitya Akademi Award, India’s highest literary honour in 1982.