Karvalo

Karvalo is a novel written by Poornachandra Tejaswi,[1] a writer from Kannada whose works include novels, short stories, non-fiction and poetry.[2]

Draco volans

Tejaswi won the "most creative novel of the year" for Karvalo in 1980 from the Sahitya Akademi.[3] [4]

Plot

In Karvalo, the protagonist is a well-educated farmer, who is also the narrator of the same story. In spite of his great interest in rural lifestyle, his unsuccessful agricultural work makes him consider ending his life as a farmer to move to the city.[5] During this time he meets Karvalo, a middle aged scientist in search of a rare lizard.[1] Their first few meetings were made to discuss the agricultural difficulties. A character named Mandanna, a local cowboy who is considered as a good-for-nothing fellow by the villagers and his friends, is very close to Karvalo. Karvalo tells the protagonist that Mandanna is his student in a way.[6]

The farmer wonders why Mandanna and Karvalo become close and what the scientist finds so special in the local cowboy. As the story progresses, the farmer understands that the scientist finds that Mandanna possesses special skills of a Naturalist, such as observational skills to identify creatures. Karvalo often goes into the deep Jungle with Mandanna and this gets the small town talking about their relationship.[7]

One day Karvalo reveals that the endangered flying Lizard Mandanna had seen, Draco dussumieri is an agamid "flying" lizard capable of gliding from tree to tree found in the Western Ghats and a relative of Draco blanfordii of China (SW Yunnan), E Thailand, W Malaysia, Myanmar, Vietnam, India and Bangladesh.[8] Karvalo is interested in finding the lizard, previously thought to have been extinct.

The journey of these characters, the protagonist, Manadanna, a camera man and cook along with Karvalo to find the elusive lizard is the story of this novel.[9] The series of discussions and revelations during the expedition gives a philosophical touch to the story, particularly the search for the truth of life.[1]

gollark: I mean, LyricLy hasn't even make macron. Even I made macron.
gollark: I think binary parsing via parser combinatory things™️ is much nicer than accursed endian swapping and casting, but your API isn't that so bee.
gollark: Ah, I see you mean the coefficient of determination, from statistics.
gollark: r2?
gollark: Interesting!

References

  1. Rajan, P. K. (1989). The Growth of the novel in India, 1950-1980. New Delhi:Abhinav Publications. p. 118. ISBN 81-7017-259-4
  2. "Flights of Fancy." Archived 3 September 2009 at the Wayback Machine Online webpage of The Hindu. Retrieved 2007-07-12.
  3. Sahitya Akademi. (1992) Encyclopaedia of Indian Literature; vol 5. p. 4309.
  4. http://www.agumberainforest.com
  5. http://www.astroshiva.wordpress.com/2007/03/23/karvalo-in-search-of-universal-truth/ Archived 13 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine 6.
  6. Karvalo's conversation with the protagonist in the novel
  7. Karvalo's week long absence along with Mandanna cited in the novel
  8. Boulenger, G. A. 1890. Fauna of British India. Reptilia and Batrachia. p. 112-113
  9. Karvalo's expedition cited in the Novel

Bibliography

  • Barts, M. & Wilms, T. 2003 Die Agamen der Welt. Draco 4 (14): 4-23
  • Blanford, W.T. 1878 Notes on some Reptilia from the Himalayas and Burma. J. Asiat. Soc. Bengal (2) xlvii: 125-131
  • Boulenger, G.A. 1885 Catalogue of the Lizards in the British Museum (Nat. Hist.) I. Geckonidae, Eublepharidae, Uroplatidae, Pygopodidae, Agamidae. London: 450 pp.
  • McGuire, Jimmy A. & Heang, Kiew Bong 2001 Phylogenetic systematics of Southeast Asian flying lizards (Iguania: Agamidae: Draco) as inferred from mitochondrial DNA sequence data. Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 72: 203-229
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.