How RK Narayan created Malgudi out of his Mysore

Mysore :

It seems a tale out of RK Narayan’s fictional world. When an activist trying to promote voting in Mysore’s Yadavgiri went to the legendary novelist’s bungalow, he wasn’t sure of the likely response. As the writer emerged from his two-storey house, he asked the activist the reason for his visit. The activist, who had seen Narayan while growing up in the locality, asked him whether he had enrolled himself as a voter. The writer, who had just completed his term at the Rajya Sabha, explained to him the politics of politics.

Narayan told the activist he was proud of the Indian democracy, but was sore about the way it was handled. “The writer told me people hardly have any choices,” the activist, who didn’t want to be identified, recollected. “I was afraid of approaching him as we in the neighborhood knew he didn’t like to be disturbed. But he talked to me at length about the Indian political system and offered me a cup of coffee,” he told TOI.

The novelist, who popularized Indian writing in English and is admired by many well-known authors such as Alexander McCall Smith, was often reclusive, says KC Belliappa, former vice-chancellor of the Rajiv Gandhi University in Arunachal Pradesh. But he loved to walk around in Mysore, when he would talk to ordinary people.

“I remember my guru C D Narasimhaiah telling me that Narayan looks for his characters while walking on the roads. That’s what Narayan had confided in him once,” Belliappa, who taught English literature at the University of Mysore, explained. Narayan was close to a handful of people; CDN, a celebrated literary critic, was one of them.

Narayan’s favourite haunt was Sayyaji Rao Road just across the Mysore Palace. “I’ve heard that he liked to walk on Dhanvantri Road besides Yadavgiri and Vonti Koppal, which might have fed his imagination when he created the fictional town of Malgudi, where most of his stories are set. ,” says the English professor.

“Like Thomas Hardy who set his fiction in the semi-fictional region of Wessex, Narayan’s Malgudi was extremely well-conceived,” the retired V-C explains. The novelist situated many of his works in Mysore, where he built a home in 1952.

Delectable Tribute

Nagaraj Rajgopal, who has named his restaurant in Mysore after RK Narayan’s fictional town, offered a sweet discount on Friday to celebrate the writer’s 108th birth anniversary. “As a child, I was inspired by Narayan’s characters. When I conceived this project, I thought of designing it with the Malgudi motif,” explains Nagaraj Rajgopal.

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Renovation after talks

The bungalow in Yadavgiri where Narayan lived will be renovated soon. The bungalow, partially pulled down in September 2011, has been declared a heritage monument. “We’ve approached Narayan’s family about the renovation and work will start soon,” heritage commissioner C G Betsurmath told TOI. He said they would take over the property and start work after further talks with the family.

source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / Home> City> Bangalore / by H M Aravind / October 11th, 2014

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