Monday, March 02, 2026

Intense Abundance

Heat and Dust

Heat and Dust 


 

“Shortly before the monsoon, the heat becomes very intense. It is said that the more intense it becomes, the more abundantly it will draw down the rains, so one wants it to be as hot as can be. And by that time one has accepted it -- not got used to but accepted; and moreover, too worn-out to fight against it, one submits to it and endures.”
― Ruth Prawer Jhabvala, Heat and Dust 




Ruth Prawer Jhabvala's Heat and Dust, a brief but powerful book, won the 1975 Booker Prize. The main story follows a young woman from England who travels to India to learn more about her past.
The story revolves around two women from different eras and their adventures in India. Olivia Rivers, a young lady from London, traveled to British colonial India with her husband Douglas. While Douglas works at his office, Olivia is left alone in their bungalow during the long Indian hours. However, the story's narrator is the other lady in the novel who recognizes Olivia as her grandfather Douglas' first wife. The narrator's name is never mentioned in the novel. The narrator has traveled to India in order to learn more about Olivia. Heat and Dust is both Olivia's story and a record of the narrator's first impressions of India. 'India always changes people, and I have been no exception,' says the narrator at the start of the story. One of the novel's most impressive features is the way the heat and dust are depicted—you can almost feel it. The hot, dusty countryside of Satipur transforms the beautiful and adoring Olivia into the harem lady of a corrupt and wasted Nawab. Two generations after Olivia, the narrator readily absorbs the various "characteristic odors of India," such as spices, urine, and betel.
Whether or not the novel accurately portrays Indian reality, it is effective in its story of love and becoming a part of India.

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