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The White Tiger

by Aravind Adiga · 2008

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The White Tiger is a 2008 picaresque novel by Indian author Aravind Adiga. The novel provides a darkly humorous perspective of India's class struggle in a globalized world as told through a retrospective narration from Balram Halwai, a village boy. The novel examines modern issues of India's caste system, corruption, and poverty. It was the recipient of the 2008 Booker Prize.

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"Winner"
Booker Prize 2008 — Winner & Shortlist · thebookerprizes.com
"This book won the Man Booker prize and I think it is a wonderful book which is written in this very gripping Indian English. It is very high octane. Here is someone who has taken this phenomenon of the liberation of English into the global arena and turned it into literature. He is Indian, highly educated and a very good writer and he has taken a what can be sometimes incomprehensible global form of English and transformed it. It is all about Balram Halwai, the ‘white tiger’. Born into an impoverished family, Balram is removed from school by his parents in order to earn money in a thankless job: shop employee. He is forced into banal, mind-numbing work. But Balram dreams of escaping – and a chance arises when a well-heeled village landlord takes him on as a chauffeur for his son (although the duties involve transporting the latter’s wife and two Pomeranian dogs). From the rich new perspective offered to him in this more interesting job, Balram discovers New Delhi, and a vision of the city changes his life forever. His learning curve is very steep, and he quickly comes to believe that the way to the top is by the most expedient means. And if that involves committing the odd crime of violence, he persuades himself that this is what successful people must do. It is very fresh, very vigorous, doesn’t take itself too seriously and completely characterises what I think are the very qualities of the English language."
US and UK English · fivebooks.com