The Hindu - International

Chronicle of a failing marriage

- Preeti Zachariah preeti.zachariah@thehindu.co.in

There is a wealth of scholarly literature that shows COVID19 took a toll not just on people’s health but on their relationsh­ips too. The uncertaint­ies caused by rolling lockdowns, the forlorn demands of social distancing, and the iron necessity of remote working were a serious strain on Love in the Time of Coronaviru­s.

Kusum Lata Sawhney’s latest novel, A Light Through the Cracks, examines a sclerotic marriage that almost inevitably comes asunder during the pandemic. The novel opens in an artplaster­ed lawyer’s office where protagonis­t Alyra Dhanrajgir, weighed down by the tedious monotony of her marriage, is attempting to divorce her husband of 23 years.

While their relationsh­ip began with no more than an easy and shared interest in casual sex, the question of marriage forced itself after Alyra found herself pregnant.

“What we had, what we have is an inbetween. An insubstant­ial complacenc­y that has seen us through twentythre­e years of a life that was deadening and lacks any passion,” she tells Rahul, her husband. Even so, she knows the exact moment when her marriage weariness set in — a chance meeting with a handsome younger man, Rajiv, in a bar.

From there, the reader is taken on a rollercoas­ter journey through the minds of the various characters. Divided into short, pithy chapters, some only a page, the novel lingers on the cause and course of this flagging marriage, meditation­s around sex and desire, that tired trope of rivalry with the motherinla­w, rumination­s on identity and belonging, the value of female friendship­s, and a somewhat prosaic account of a changing India.

None of these themes is particular­ly original, and while the novel is structural­ly interestin­g, it could do with more show and less tell. A little more character building would have helped the novel go further — for instance, Alrya’s motherinla­w Promilla is decidedly a caricature.

Given the novel’s genre, however, credit to Sawhney for attempting to capture the life of a woman closer to middle age than girlhood, in a society that links youth to female desirabili­ty and tends to invisibili­se older women.

 ?? ?? A Light Through the Cracks Kusum Lata Sawhney Har-Anand Publicatio­ns
₹795
A Light Through the Cracks Kusum Lata Sawhney Har-Anand Publicatio­ns ₹795

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