Creepy tales
SHEILA KUMAR

A triad of mysteries, two of them with other-worldly beings, makes for a 
rewarding read.

Faleiro's collection of stories feature Goan ghosts in Goan locales. The 
Fonseca clan gathers to celebrate Savio's 75th birthday and, for some reason 
not really explained, one by one, they begin to tell of their experiences and 
encounters with denizens of the other world. Faleiro starts off tamely with the 
story of a much-loved son who has something to tell his ailing mother and comes 
in the form of a kogul bird. The tales start to get on stronger ground, if you 
will pardon the contradictory term, from then on. There are watery-eyes ghosts 
(indeed, a felicitous description) ghosts from the Portuguese Inquisition 
period; guilt-ridden nanny apparitions, and the like. Willy-nilly, the stories 
become a colourful background detail; the reader is basically gleaning a lot of 
information about the tale-tellers themselves, their quirks, their 
eccentricities, their belief or cynicism. And yes, life in Goa forms the subtle 
leitmotif.

Falerio employs no artful device in the telling of her story. The style and 
language are uncomplicated and the descriptive passages have an informed 
elegance. Only thing, the reader is likely to be in on the game (the main 
stratagem, if you will) long before the denouement; at least, this reader was. 
Also, this slim volume of carefully calibrated; almost gentle ghost stories 
with a lovely black and white cover picture, so full of atmosphere.

Minakshi Chaudhry curates supernatural sagas from Shimla and presents them for 
the reader's delight in the most simplistic manner possible. Indeed, at times, 
the stories are forced to stand purely on their merit, because Chaudhry seems 
to be more collator than writer. It's all there, right from the mist-laden 
trees on the jacket, the hoary chestnuts that attend to ghosts in hill towns: 
forlorn wraiths; churails who wander at 'water sources' between 12.00 noon and 
3.00 pm; the dread sound of unseen hooves; the atmosphere always, but always, 
turning eerily chilly when a visitation is on; baleful and cranky ghosts 
balancing helpful and amiable ones; mostly unsuspecting victims and a couple 
who know or sense what they cannot see.

The book has a charming idea at its heart but falls heavily on the execution 
front. A room becomes a house in the same story; punctuation takes frequent 
leave of absence in a most substantial manner; tenses play fast and loose with 
the text. Repetition forms the backbone of these stories; apparently most of 
the ghosts conform to some code of behaviour. I would say the reader can safely 
give this lot of stories a skip but the book is in its fourth impression, so 
obviously one person's lame ghost is another's terror-inducing phantom.

The pick of this lot is Liddle's set of short stories, which are not so much 
spectral or supernatural in nature as slice-of-life tales that come with a 
mandatory twist to each tale's tail, a kicker that the reader starts to 
anticipate and second-guess soon. The people are everypeople, ordinary, banal 
but capable of mining their intrinsic base nature if the situation so 
required... and, in Liddle's world, the situation frequently calls for such 
regression. So, overtly nice people turn just a wee bit evil; murder is 
contemplated and committed; the disadvantaged and the deprived choose to shrug 
rather than drown; and yes, everywhere, people give in limpidly to temptation.

Liddle does a nice line in creeps. Which is why the reader is willing to 
overlook minor league nuisances like italics where they don't need to be, an 
awkwardly constructed sentence or two, incongruencies like Indian children 
making mud pies. Because, in the end, that one sometimes subtle, sometimes 
obvious quirk placed inside each story is a most appealing quirk.

http://www.thehindu.com/books/books-reviews/creepy-tales/article4679609.ece

~Avelino

Reply via email to