Current:Home > Stocks'The East Indian' imagines the life of the first Indian immigrant to now-U.S. land -InvestTomorrow
'The East Indian' imagines the life of the first Indian immigrant to now-U.S. land
View
Date:2025-04-22 14:56:14
Historical fiction writers live in three time zones simultaneously: The past is what they aim to interrogate imaginatively, the present is what they seek to interpret through that recreated past, and the future is what they hope to influence through a newly interpreted present.
Often they are driven to embrace this challenging mode of being because specific gaps, omissions, and conflicts in historical record trouble or fascinate them — and the only way they can address these aspects is through fictional invention and intervention.
With The East Indian, Brinda Charry aims to do just that by recovering, reclaiming, and reframing the little-known, barely footnoted history of the earliest Indian immigrant on record to what is now the United States. The first permanent English colony in America was founded in Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607. And this is where Tony, the eponymous East Indian, finds himself in 1635, working as an indentured servant on tobacco plantations.
Born with unclear paternity to a Tamil courtesan, Tony's comfortable life on India's Coromandel Coast ends soon after he loses his mother. Her British patron sends the boy to London to start a new life. Despite the kindness of some other Indian immigrants there, things do not go as planned. He's kidnapped and put on a ship sailing for the New World. Being the only East Indian among various groups of white and Black people, he is more the lone stranger than anyone else.
This otherness gives him a unique perspective on all the sociopolitical goings-on but often puts him in the most precarious position with whites, Blacks, and Native Americans. So his journey to adulthood is filled with adventures and tragedies, gains and losses, love and longing. Eventually, he manipulates his way into his dream physician apprentice job. But, as he soon learns, this brings even more complications at a time when people resist or lash out against the unknowns of science and medicine.
That healing art, much-feared by others, is also the beating heart of this story because it fuels Tony's deep desire "to give rebirth to myself, yet once more. Tony East Indian — laborer, adventurer, and now physician's apprentice. I was both the parent and the babe, and I was resolved to make a success of it." He confesses to a fellow indentured servant and friend that such rebirthing is "hard labor." Still, this inner struggle drives all of Tony's actions, decisions, and emotions.
Despite never finding sure footing, he is determined: "I would thrive wherever the wind laid me." When he discovers that he will never be able to return to India, which is still home to him, he declares, "...I will be my own shelter, my landing place. Like a snail, I will carry home on my back, find it where I happen to be, make it from what I bear inside me."
Tony's attitude of resilient hope and growing attachment to America — which is also constantly rebirthing itself like him — is one that all immigrants will identify with readily. But that is only low-hanging fruit for Charry. She aims to do a lot more with her storytelling. As she shows us, the 17th century was also the period when colonization and globalization began spreading worldwide. The Indian subcontinent, Africa, Europe, and the Americas were all dealing with mass displacement alongside momentous discovery.
Through the highs and lows of the novel's characters, Charry shows how all those forces are still shaping our present. There are, for example, references to a Great Wall being built to enclose 300,000 acres and keep the English colony "safe." There are scenes where no one knows where India is or where to place a brown person, so they dismiss Tony as a "Moor" instead. As for the legacy our present is creating for our future, we have only to note the recurring patterns of this past.
If the above makes the novel sound like some dry history text, please let me disabuse you of that notion. Charry's most remarkable feat with this novel is that she wears her enormous learning and research lightly throughout. Her cinematic worldbuilding ensures spectacle and substance as it sweeps us along the Coromandel coast, London streets, and the Virginian countryside. The characters are detailed with care and attention so that we find humanity even in the worst of them. Tony's voice, in first-person point of view, is earnest and endearing, especially when he is filled with wonder about human biology, the beauty and curative qualities of various plants and flowers, and the powerful mystery of falling in love.
In her author's note, Charry reveals the personal encounters that resulted in this novel. As a scholar of English Renaissance literature, a reference to an "Indian boy" in Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream and the omission of what happened to him at the end of the play always haunted her. "Tony" was the earliest-known brief mention of an East Indian worker in the American archives. After him, more were recorded, including a young East Indian man who had apprenticed with a London apothecary before coming to America. The Tony of Charry's novel is all three of them.
Just over the last four decades, there has been a slew of books about South Asian or East Indian immigrants — both fiction and nonfiction. Several have won awards. Almost all of them have centered on contemporary stories. Charry's "Tony East Indian" plants his own flag in this literary landscape. As he says towards the end: "Others of my kind will come here, and still others, and they will tell their stories, tales filled with loss, doubt, wonder, and hope. But mine, such as it is, is a first story."
Through this fictional first East Indian immigrant story, Brinda Charry has also beautifully pioneered a much-needed path forward into rich, new literary territory.
Jenny Bhatt is a writer, literary translator, book critic, and the founder of Desi Books. She tweets at @jennybhatt.
veryGood! (28715)
Related
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Tom Sandoval apologizes for comparing 'Vanderpump Rules' scandal to O.J. Simpson, George Floyd
- Paul Giamatti on his journey to 'The Holdovers' and Oscars: 'What a funny career I've had'
- NBC Sports California hiring Harry Caray's great-grandson as A's play-by-play voice
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- Chicago Sues 5 Oil Companies, Accusing Them of Climate Change Destruction, Fraud
- Barry Keoghan gets naked for Vanity Fair Hollywood cover issue, talks 'Saltburn' dance
- Rare incident: Colorado man dies after pet Gila monster bites him
- Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
- The Best Makeup Removers by Type With Picks From Olivia Culpo, Chloe Bailey, Paige DeSorbo, and More
Ranking
- Gen. Mark Milley's security detail and security clearance revoked, Pentagon says
- West Virginia bill allowing librarians to be prosecuted over 'obscene' books moves forward
- Midge Purce, Olivia Moultrie lead youthful USWNT to easy win in Concacaf W Gold Cup opener
- Presidential disaster declaration approved for North Dakota Christmastime ice storm
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Cincinnati Reds' Elly De La Cruz makes spring impact – on teammate Hunter Greene's car
- Chicago Sues 5 Oil Companies, Accusing Them of Climate Change Destruction, Fraud
- 7 Black women backstage at the Grand Ole Opry, talking Beyoncé and country music
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Connecticut trooper who fatally shot man in stopped car set to go on trial
Republican prosecutor in Arizona takes swipe at New York district attorney prosecuting Trump
'The Amazing Race' Season 36 cast: Meet the teams racing around the world
Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow owns a $3 million Batmobile Tumbler
Richonne rises in ‘The Walking Dead: The Ones Who Live’ starring Andrew Lincoln and Danai Gurira
When does tax season end in 2024? Here's when you should have your taxes filed this year.
Child hospitalized after 4 fall through ice on northern Vermont lake