Book description
Shiva Naipaul was the brother of V. S. Naipaul and author of
Firefles and The Chip-Chip Gatherers. The Chip-Chip
Gatherers, his second novel, was winner of the Whitbread Literary
Award in 1973 and is set in Naipaul's native Trinidad. It includes a
new foreword by Amit Chaudhuri.
The crowded, ramshackle community of the Settlement in Trinidad is
at the mercy of a tyrant. Egbert Ramsaran, the proud owner of the
Ramsaran Transport Company, who has become the richest man in town
through sheer strength of will, is a capricious, eccentric despot who
loves nobody and whom nobody can afford to ignore. There is his son
Wilbert, bullied into passivity and failure; Vishnu the downtrodden
grocer without grace or hope; the beautiful, unpredictable Sushila,
who tries to wield her seductive powers over Ramsaran; and her
daughter, Sita, intelligent enough to know that escape is possible.
Their intricately woven lives are perfectly captured in all their
pathos, comedy and humanity.
Shiva Naipaul was born in Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago, in
1945, the younger brother of the novelist V. S. Naipaul. Having won a
scholarship to study Chinese at University College, Oxford, he
emigrated to England, where he met and later married Jenny Stuart. He
wrote two novels - Fireflies (1970) and The Chip-Chip
Gatherers (1973) - before turning to non-fiction. His book
North of South, an account of his travels in Africa, is
published in Penguin Modern Classics. Later works include the novel
A Hot Country, as well as a collection of fiction and
non-fiction, Beyond the Dragon's Mouth. Naipaul died from a
heart attack in August 1985, aged forty.
Amit Chaudhuri was born in Calcutta in 1962, and grew up in Bombay.
He read English at University College, London and completed his
doctorate on D. H. Lawrence at Balliol College, Oxford. He has written
five novels: A Strange and Sublime Address; Afternoon
Raag; Freedom Song; A New World; and The
Immortals, which was shortlisted for the Commonwealth Writers
Prize for Best Book. He is now Professor in Contemporary Literature at
the University of East Anglia and was made Fellow of the Royal Society
of Literature in 2009.