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Review of A Land in the Sun: Poems By Gopikrishnan Kottoor 

  • Writer: Dr. Nikita Yadav
    Dr. Nikita Yadav
  • Feb 26
  • 4 min read


Published by Penprints, January 2025

ISBN: 978-81-981564-9-5

Price: 380 INR

Language: English, pp. 68

 

From being a General Manager at the most reputed bank in India to being an acclaimed writer, Gopikrishnan Kottoor's work has been featured in many international and national journals. A Land in the Sun is a collection of 58 poems. This collection reflects and focuses on fleeting human experiences which feel both mundane and universal. Kottoor is known for his earlier works like Poems from America and his translations of Malayalam poetry, the prominent one being the translation of Ramanan by Changampuzha. His anthology of poems, A Land in the Sun, stands out for its quiet elegance.

 

The book begins with the poem titled "Sapera" (The Snake Charmer), which captures the essence of a hot afternoon in a countryside setting. The narrator is mesmerized by the control that the snake-charmer had on the "enslaved" snakes. Though the scene of snakes charmed and controlled by the tunes of been played by the snake-charmer could be tempting and alluring to watch, there could be a broader perspective to it that the poet wanted to hint at, which is the dominance of humans over something natural, over the creatures that are supposed to be free and wild on their own rather than used for recreation purposes for humans. Kottoor talks about the Wayanad tragedy in one of his poems, a devastating landslide which struck Kerala on July 30, 2024, causing destruction and loss of life. The loss is depicted with gruesome reality and moving imagery:

Outside in the darkness,people keep dying under the mudand trees fall over them asleep.They are choking,the little ones who wake upgasping to cry,the wet mudsmothering them like a mother's breasttoo hard upon their mouths.What use, what use, God?

Kottoor has talked about the most random and mundane things in his poems, varying from the portrayal of tiny creatures, "encircling our electric lights," in his poem "Small Lives"; to the stewards on the plane described as "characters in a play carrying chicken stew, coffee, bread and water" walking in the passageway no longer entranced by the beauty of the still clouds. "A Poem to My Strand of Hair" explores the narrator's conflicted emotions over a single strand of grey hair, which symbolizes the inevitable process of aging. The poems reflect on Kottoor's exceptional observational skills, even in the simplest of things, resulting in valuable insights and a different takeaway, which most of us fail to observe in our lives as humans nowadays are always in a hurry, not a moment spared to reflect or observe one's surroundings. This is what Kottoor brings to readers, nothing exemplary or out of the ordinary; instead, his biggest achievement as a poet is to make ordinary special and "noticed," restoring the faith in the simplicity of ordinary in today's era, where everything needs to be "aesthetic."

"My Father's Shirt" weaves the fabric of a simple garment into a tapestry of inheritance, love of a son, and the passing of time. The poem which resonates the most in this digital and social era by Kottoor has to be "Dead Friends on Facebook." In Kottoor's words:

Here's a place you go to,to look up friendsyou never looked up to then,who left without telling you.They there, once standing beside vineyardsor colourful bloom.some with their pets, some hiding regretssome with their books,rented horses for fame,and some with their breaking guitars.

Poems like "Tiny Flowers" and "Flamingos" paint landscapes where the natural world mirrors the inner turmoil of humans. Kottoor touches on the theme of death and mortality in the poems "The Death Is Announced" and "The Last Man in the Bar." The man pouring the whiskey in a bar portrays a solitary figure nursing "dreams" in a dimly lit space, where "the bar" becomes his solitude. The stillness in the air hints at the mortality of humans, affirming the birth and death cycle. The title poem of the anthology "A Land in the Sun" moves from gratitude and awe to overwhelming emotion of loss over nature. The sunny land amidst the greenery suddenly turns into "miles and miles of emptiness," and the narrator struggles to understand this sudden change. Most probably, Kottoor is emphasizing the importance of nature and how humans are destroying the natural beauty, instead of preserving it. Also, the sense of loss is evoked through this poem.

Kottoor's poems are personal as well as political, sometimes laden with cultural elements, a couple of times with rich imagery of various places. However, what remains at the end of reading this book is that his poems are about introspection with nuanced insights rather than activism. Kottoor's translation background shines through, making the poems accessible yet layered for a wider reach of audience. A Land in the Sun excels in its free verse and subtle rhyme, allowing emotions to unfold organically. Gopikrishnan Kottoor's poems define the beauty in transience. Through its vivid portrayal of love, nature, and loss, it reminds the reader that poetry's power lies in transforming the ordinary into the eternal. Kottoor's poems offer solace in a monotonous world. This anthology not only captures a land bathed in sunlight but also the human's resilience and unwavering spirit.


About the Reviewer:


Dr. Nikita Yadav holds a PhD in English Literature from the Department of English and Modern European Languages, University of Lucknow. Her works have been published in Muse India and Rhetorica – A Literary Journal of Arts.

 

 

 

 

1 Comment


Guest
Mar 03

Beautiful

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