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Bubble Rising in a Rusted Tub: Book Review of The Years

The most unabashedly given advice on Writing is “Keep your eyes, ears, nose, open to life around you.” Javed Akhtar in a panel with Kausar Munir at Jashn-e-Rekhta said something around the same line, that women have been noticing inner world for so long that they have completely molten this life and are in sync with the outer world to give it the shape they want.


As much there is a sense of upliftment to hear this, there is also a very thick line of distinction – inner and outer world. There is no marvel in that adage anymore. It is like seeing a cycle’s rubber tube being fixed when all other cars are passing by. Cycle’s puncher being fixed is an image from the first decade of 2000 when ‘cycles’ were yet to be replaced with ‘bike’ and we were noticing bubbles rising in a rusted tub, made of ferric oxide, earlier of ferrous oxide, and much before that, when someone even called it just ferrum.

Some years later, I will be reading The Years by Annie Ernaux, a memoir that converses with that exact moment in the afternoon of December in Dhyanchand Stadium when some of us were still thinking: “So what is this inner world, what is domestic, what do you mean by women can see the small?” when Annie Ernaux captures time. She creates a dimension to hold. In that sense her memoir is also a poem on time. Guardian has done a better review than I can ever give so this is just to confess that before reading The Years I used to understand that all stories are majorly about life. The Years is about time. In writing this she gave us unputdownable story of a time and a space.

There is so much I remember from the book and my notes prove it. It is the most highlighted book on my kindle and yet I have not even consulted it once before writing this review. “All images will disappear” begins the preface. Memory is everything in this.

In houses that keep their windows open, do we ever make sense of the reflection that is being captured by the glasses of these windows? I tend to think them as their memories. That they see past, present and future, all in one go. Reading The Years was that. It captured time from time. If one wants to see how time is told, lived, and foregone, this is the book to notice bubbles rising from.

 

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