• Welcome to BookAndReader!

    We LOVE books and hope you'll join us in sharing your favorites and experiences along with your love of reading with our community. Registering for our site is free and easy, just CLICK HERE!

    Already a member and forgot your password? Click here.

Booktin does in Swarup's Slumdog Millionaire Novel

booktin

New Member
Oh I’ve seen the film, I was wrapped up in all the hype and after all the ‘de de de de de de de’ (that was the Who Wants to Be A Millionaire soundtrack - duh) I came to the conclusion that although I thought the film was good, it wasn’t a totally ‘feel good film.’
How could it be when Dev Patel’s brother and mother dies and his bird has her face sliced…
Maybe the critics meant, his winning the cash in these credit crunched times… hmmm. Anyway, I opened Q&A expecting to be blown away, because the film, although over-hyped, was rather good. I always reckon books are better than the films anyway. Oh my. Was I proved wrong.

According to Borders and the Metro, Q&A sales have rocketed but I have to say - I did not like this book. Perhaps I didn’t like it because I was disorientated by the film; Slumdog bears almost no resemblance to Q&A. But enough novel to film comparisons - “review the book” I hear you cry; so it is to the book I go.

Firstly, some of the phrasing is a little awkward, such as ‘bevy of beauties’ and Salim says: ‘I am taking revenge on those who have maligned Armaan’ (Armaan is the equivilant of Amitabh Bachchan in the novel). That is a perhaps a little overcritical but it disjoints the flow. The structure of the film threw me because I had no patience for the Little-Orphan-That-Was story nor for his being adopted by a priest, working for an actress or any of the tiddly bits in between.

On the other hand, I did admire the way Swarup quite heavily confronts
the closeted gay scene and also domestic and child abuse -the three are quite closeted in the sense that no one addresses it in the community. It is seen as shameful, a family matter that one must deal with in silence. Armaan, the character who is a mega Bollywood star whom Salim idolises, turns out to be gay. The next afternoon the two boys are watching Armaan’s film at the cinema when he magically turns up in the theatre and starts to feel up Salim. This was rather unsettling as homosexuality and child abuse are uncomfortably united.
Pause for thought.

The writing glimmers brilliantly in some parts but utterly failed to keep my attention in others - to be honest with you I gave up because I got bored.

Not my cup of chai.
 
I absolutely loved this book. I loved the film, but the book is at least twice as good. Very, very easy to read, and I'm picky!

Q & A has far darker areas than the film. You get to know the slumdog much better, and he's a wonderful character in so many ways.

The ending in the book has a couple of clever twists which weren't in the film. They are brilliant.

You are the only person I've heard knock the book in any way.:confused:
Perhaps you weren't in a reading mood when you picked it up?
 
I agree Slumdog Millionaire isn't really a feel-good film. While the ending is optimistic and all, I feel like Boyle spent so much time showing how rough Jamal's life was/is. I'm debating whether or not to read the novel; it seems like a good read, but after having seen the film twice I think I'd be comparing the two products quite often.
 
I agree Slumdog Millionaire isn't really a feel-good film. While the ending is optimistic and all, I feel like Boyle spent so much time showing how rough Jamal's life was/is. I'm debating whether or not to read the novel; it seems like a good read, but after having seen the film twice I think I'd be comparing the two products quite often.

I think this is why I maybe had no patience for the book - I had a rigid structure of what one was to the other. I haven't ever done that before - watched the film and then reading the book. I found it harder
 
I would always watch the movie and read the book afterward, so at first the differences between the two mediums would never bother me that much. Now I make it a point to read a novel before seeing the film version. Like I said in another thread on this topic, I didn't know this was an adaptation of a novel. If I did, I probably would have waited.
 
I would always watch the movie and read the book afterward, so at first the differences between the two mediums would never bother me that much. Now I make it a point to read a novel before seeing the film version. Like I said in another thread on this topic, I didn't know this was an adaptation of a novel. If I did, I probably would have waited.

Me too! I do that too now. With Benjamin Button and the Reader, I've read both the books now will watch the films. Even with The Kite Runner, the movies leave so many holes in the plot, if you read the book then you understand what's been left out
 
The film was okay.
2.gif
I have not read it though.
 
Back
Top