'The Sting of the Peppercorns' a vivid slice of Goa in the 60s (Book Review)

IANS 

Book: The of Peppercorns; Author: Antonio Gomes; Publisher: Amaryllis; Pages: 240; Price: R. 325

Antonio Gomes' "The of the Peppercorns" is set in an era of transition and tumult. It opens in the lavish, stately village of in South Goa, once the abode of elite Catholic landlords, who had converted from the Gaud Saraswat Brahmin caste.

Incidentally, is now a well sought-after piece of for the wealthy elite from Indian metros who are obsessed with the quest of owning perfectly preserved Indo-Portuguese homes.

On a balmy summer morning in 1961, one of the village's grandest mansions and its masters -- Afonso de Albuquerque, his wife Dona Maria Isabella dos Santos Albuquerque, other son and daughter -- await the return of their ward Paulo from Coimbra in Portugal, where he had ostensibly gone to pursue law, but had wallowed in debauchery in the seedier parts of the river-fronted city, unknown to most others in the family.

The immediately establishes the inevitable air of change, when Paulo, soon after his return, faces a brutal attack by a band of anti-colonial guerrillas keen on looting the valuables in the homes of the rich landlords of the time in the name of raising money for their subversive war against the colonists.

"The of the Peppercorns" captures the steady decline in the fate and fortunes of rich, aristocratic Catholic families in in the wake of the socio-political changes following the Liberation by the Indian armed forces and the subsequent takeover by the

Thanks to Paulo, the privileged, stoic Albuquerque lineage now finds itself getting charmed by the hippies in Anjuna and villages who had just begun to descend on from and in the mid to late 1960s.

The major socio-political changes in in the 1960s, like the transition of power, the iconic referendum where Goans chose to be an independent state rather than merge with the neighbouring state of Maharashtra, the emergence of the hippies on the canvas, as well as clash of cultures, both old and new, is vividly described by the using the characters which are at his disposal.

"The of the Peppercorns", where the reference to peppercorns is undoubtedly linked to the overwhelming spice trade off and the fuelled by the colonisers, serves as a timely fictional reference of a relatively less-documented period and region.

Antonio Gomes, a native of Goa, is a at the in New York and specialises in cardiology. Not surprisingly, he has very aptly analysed Goa's beating heart through one of its roughest periods.

(Mayabhushan Nagvenkar can be contacted at mayabhushan.n@ians.in)

--IANS

maya/vm/ky/sac

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, January 25 2018. 11:44 IST