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The English Teacher

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Introduction

RK Narayan’s The English Teacher came sometime after The Dark Room as the author had a tough time dealing with the death of his wife Rajam.

This story is an autobiography of Narayan and he has used his pain and travails into the narration. This is a unique love story of a 30 something, English lecturer named Krishna in Malgudi’s Albert Mission College.

The story starts in the hostel of Albert Mission College located in Malgudi. Krishna had been a student in the same college. Now, he is a lecturer. He finds his job and life tiresome and filled with boredom.

One of the reasons being that he cannot work on his own poems and intellectual pursuits as teaching demands its own energy and time. He is uninterested in his students is happy to hear the bell ring to the end of the class.

He is self-critical compares himself to a “cow” that does nothing but ruminate on dead grass. He is particular about his ways and almost trying too hard to fit himself in a Western mould.

This adds to his frustrations and makes him feel pessimistic about his circumstance. It is a dream to become a poet even though he struggles to write voraciously. But he has a good sense of humour and uses it cleverly to always spread cheer in his college and students.

The Reunion

Krishna is going through a midlife crisis and feels uninspired and lonely. He is away from his family and misses living with his loving wife, Susila and young daughter, Lela.

One day he gets a letter from his father telling about his wife and daughter. They are coming to live with him in Malgudi. His mother also comes to stay with them. Krishna is happy, at least for some time.

He seems to get a new lease on life. Susila is an exact opposite of Krishna, spiritual and impulsive. The character sketch of Susila is emblematic of Indian woman, culture and tradition.

Krishna is a dreamer and lacks a grasp of the practical life while Susila exhibits common sense and practical wisdom. She compliments and fulfils the shortcomings of Krishna. This is what makes their bond strong and enduring.

But soon the tide turns for the worst. First, due to the number of bodies, the current house is not suited and fit for their family. Hence, they look for a new house.

While they are on their search, Susila is stung by an insect and falls sick. She gets typhoid and unfortunately cannot recover. Tragedy strikes their home and Susila dies due to her illness. The loss of his beloved wife derails Krishna.

He is disconsolate and stricken with incurable grief. He becomes disenchanted with his job and personal life. His only refuge and reason to live is his baby daughter. Therefore, he spends all his energy and affection on her as she becomes the centre of his world.

Communication Beyond Veil

Krishna often loiters around a pond. On his frequent visits, he encounters a hermit or Sanyasi . The Sanyasi claims to necromancy or his ability to communicate with the dead and their spirits.

Unable to resist the temptation, he decides to try the spiritual route in order to reach his beloved wife. Krishna yearns to talk to his departed wife and entertains the Sanyasi’s claim.

He successfully communicates with Susila’s spirit. This acts as a shot in the arm of Krishna who is reinvigorated to turn his life for the better.

New Beginning

Revitalized Krishna goes and interviews for a job at a new children’s school. It is the same place where his daughter Leela studies. Interestingly the headmaster of the school has a contrasting character is to Krishna.

He is eccentric in his approach and committed to his students. He has a far more optimistic outlook on life and is a lot happier than Krishna. He knows that the beauty of life is in enjoying brief moments of happiness.

He is spiritual and pursues to obtain inner satisfaction. But Krishna is a changed man by now. The headmaster of the school is delighted to learn about Krishna’s inspired theories and plans for imparting education to the young kids.

Krishna quits his job in the college and joins the new school. To add another boost to his spirits he is directly converse with the spirit of his dead wife for the first time. He forgets his sorrows and develops a fresh and positive outlook on life, vocation and purpose.

English Teacher: Key Thoughts

The English Teacher is a remarkably exultant account of the love shared between a man and his wife. It honours the mundane details of a homely life infused with momentary tiffs, activities like reading and shopping together, childcare, house hunting etc.

Narayan is able to extract and use the tranquil contentment out of his own marital experience. He, too, was an uninspired and unsatisfied English teacher once. His wife Rajam and their marriage transformed him both as a person and writer.

The story of Krishna’s life, happiness and grief are both relatable and inspirational for many. Even the flirtations with the supernatural, philosophical and metaphysical are understandable.

The tragedy of human loss and the yearning to regain the lost love is not subject to the mortality of flesh and bones. Narayan gives a theory of death where it is just the culmination of the physical existence. The soul remains eternal and preserves the emotional synapses within it.

You can read a detailed analysis of the topic by downloading this document .

book review of the english teacher by rk narayan

book review of the english teacher by rk narayan

The English Teacher

R. K. Narayan | 4.05 | 3,626 ratings and reviews

book review of the english teacher by rk narayan

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Mark Tully Krishnan is often seen as RK Narayan. I have chosen it as a tribute to Narayan, who was internationally discovered by Graham Greene. I love the writing of Graham Greene and I love the writing of Narayan, in part because it is such clean writing. I get terribly bored with overly adjectival writing. I get bored with writing which is unnecessarily complex and unnecessarily descriptive. You can hardly get a more lean writer than R K Narayan. And again he is writing about very ordinary people. There is nothing sensational, heroic or deeply tragic about his writing. Of course it is very sensitive... (Source)

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English literature essays, krishnan's journey in the english teacher.

. . . something has been drained from the adult heart. Belief in the miraculous closes down [2]

Krishna, the central character in The English Teacher , by R. K. Narayan (1906-2001) undertakes an emotional, intellectual, and spiritual journey during the course of the novel. At the start of the novel he is an English teacher, living and teaching at the same school where he was once a pupil, and at the end we see him resigning his post, beginning work at a nursery school, and learning to communicate psychically with his dead wife. He learns and changes during the course of the novel in a way which he could not have predicted at the beginning. The journey takes him from a lifestyle which he found unsatisfactory to finding a set of values and a way of life that he feels he can believe in wholly.

Krishna's change comes about not as a result of any grand plan or ambition, but as a result of his response to a series of challenging circumstances which arise once he begins to take steps away from the cloistered and protective environment of his school.

This day-by-day, unforeseen-event by unforeseen-event progress is reflected in Narayan's approach to the novel itself. Narayan gives the impression that he has no pre-planned plot in mind when the story opens, but instead focuses on a meticulously detailed depiction of Krishna's experiences, keeping to the observable surface reality of his perceptions, thoughts, and feelings, without digression or analysis or interpretation. This rigorous unadorned focus on observable phenomena results in some stunningly beautiful writing.

But although Krishna's journey takes place as a result of a series of unpredictable events, a number of recurring themes are being worked out in the course of the novel. These themes might be said to be Krishna's progress from predictability to unpredictability, from the academic world to the real world of life and death, from adulthood to childhood, and from a western mentality to an eastern mentality.

Krishna repeatedly finds himself being drawn out of situations which ought to have been predictable and ordered by events which are spontaneous and unpredictable, and it is clear that he finds spontaneity and unpredictability to be stimulating and life-enhancing, while predictability and order, although providing a cushion of comfort and security, is ultimately stifling and deadening

Krishna is roused from his predictable and ordered life at his school, where he had come to feel he lived 'like a cow', and had a continuous 'sense of something missing' [Ch 1. p. 295], and where a pupil spelling 'honour' without the 'u' is seen as a catastrophe by his colleagues, by the unexpected news that his wife and child, both of whom are to be sources of spontaneity and unpredictability throughout the novel, are coming to join him, and that he will need to move out of his lodgings at the school and find a house for them. This marks the first step of what becomes a journey out of the cloistered world of the school and into the real world of ordinary people leading ordinary lives.

Susila, his wife, brings unpredictability into his life at every turn. For example when they go to look at a house she wants to make a long diversion to walk by the river and bathe her feet, where the rational orderly Krishna would have naturally taken the most direct route, and it is clear that he finds her unpredictable behaviour a source of delight and inspiration.

Krishna does not adjust to this new influence without a struggle, however, as is seen in the episode where she gets rid of the predictably-unpredictable alarm clock he had kept on his desk for years. This clock, which was liable to set off its alarm at arbitrary times of day and night, seems to symbolise his old attitude to predictability versus spontaneity. He held onto the clock for years, as if its unpredictable behaviour were precious to him, and yet he stifled it with a literary tome whenever it sounded its alarm. He seems to have cherished it for its unpredictability, even though that unpredictability was inappropriate and ineffective, without quite realising why, and when his wife gets rid of it behind his back it comes as a great shock to him and causes a row which drags on for several days before he can accept her act with equanimity.

This jarring episode seems to mark his transition from a world dominated by predictability to a world dominated by unpredictability, and from that point on he has to start actually living day to day on the basis of the truth which he may have previously intuitively sensed, but stifled, that there is a severe limit to what can be achieved in life through any system which is ordered, predictable, and knowable.

The turning point of the story arises from Susila's unpredictability. When they go to look at the house we could not possibly predict that she would go for a walk on her own, get stuck in a contaminated lavatory, and then become ill. When they prepare for the journey it might have seemed that Narayan was preparing for a plot in which something bad happened to their child while they were away, but in the event the important incident is not something that could have been guessed beforehand, either by the reader or by Krishna, but an unpredictable event which arises on the spur of the moment.

Krishna's intention was that their visits to view houses should proceed in an ordered, predictable, rational way, but Susila brought unpredictability to the occasions, resulting in moments of beauty, such as the walk by the river, but also in the awful tragedy of her becoming infected by a fatal illness. She brings reality into his life, which was previously protected from reality by the enclosed ordered world of the school, and later she initiates the most unpredictable event of all, her psychic communication with him from beyond death.

The futility of clinging to the belief that life can be orderly, predictable, and knowable is shown in two central, and symmetrical, predictions which occupy a prominent place in the novel. The first is the doctor's assertion that typhoid, which Susila has contracted, 'is the one fever which goes strictly by its own rules. It follows a time-table . . . ' [Ch 3. p.366] and that Susila will be well in a few weeks. But in spite of his further assurances that her attack is 'Absolutely normal course. No complications. A perfect typhoid run . . . ' [Ch 3. p.369] Susila dies.

The other prominent demonstration of the futility of believing that life can be knowable and predictable is seen in the headmaster's belief in a prediction made by an astrologer, 'who can see past present and future as one, and give everything its true value' [Ch 7. p. 450] that he will die on a given date. But although (just as the doctor had asserted that Susila's typhoid was 'A perfect typhoid run') the headmaster has found that his 'life has gone precisely as he predicted' [Ch 7. p. 450], the headmaster lives.

Both predictions are propounded with certainly, and both prove to be false. The scientifically-based prediction of life is thwarted by death, and the mystical prediction of death is thwarted by in life.

Both of these episodes show the limitations of man's ability to know and predict the world. The truth is that we cannot know, and cannot predict, and any view of life, whether deriving from modern western science, or ancient eastern mysticism, which disregards the unknowable and sees only what is supposedly known, and supposedly predictable, is hopelessly inadequate.

While these episodes fail to provide Krishna with anything rational to believe in, they do bring him face to face with the reality of life and death, and confronting the realities of life without retreating into the safe cerebral world of literature and philosophy is an important component of his journey. His unsatisfying immersion in a sterile literary approach to life is shown in a number of ways. For example the novel opens with him wearily facing the fact that he is reading 'for the fiftieth time, Milton, Carlyle and Shakespeare' [Ch 1. p. 295]. Later he tries to write a love poem for his wife, but it is simply a copy of a poem by Wordsworth, and later still he tries to read a book on Plato, but gives up on the very first sentence.

Now he is discovering how ordinary people encounter the big issues of life and death, not as seen through the perspective of literature or philosophy, and not in a way that would imply that some profound universal conclusions could be drawn, but as they actually experience it in everyday life.

And Narayan himself, insofar as we can identify him with the character of Krishna, is writing at the level of those ordinary people. He does not adopt the position of a novelist presenting the reader with fictitious characters which he has created, and which are under his control, as for example Charles Dickens does, but in the guise of Krishna he places himself firmly among the ordinary people, and breaks down the boundaries between real life outside his novel and the life within the novel. Just as Krishna faces life without illusions, so Narayan seems to create his novel without the usual illusions of the novelist, such as pre-planned plot and fictitious characters.

In an outburst with one of his students Krishna says of literature: 'Don't worry so much about these things - they are trash, we are obliged to go through and pretend we like them, but all the time the problem of living and dying is crushing us.' [Ch 7. p.438]

In coming to terms with the death of his wife literature, philosophy, and rationalism, are no use to him. They are all illusions, and the journey he is on involves leaving illusions behind.

Narayan's writing style, which is inseparable from the observations of Krishna, the first-person narrator, has been showing us this all along. Right from page one Narayan has presented us with only 'the barest truths and facts of life'.

The truth Krishna wants to discover cannot be found in Shakespeare, Carlyle, or Plato, it is found only among real people leading real lives, it is 'the law of life'.

Children are very much in evidence throughout 'The English Teacher', and are important guides for Krishna on his journey. At the beginning he is with the boys at his school, but they are no longer children but young adults, already entangled in the system from which he needs to escape. The children who help to show him the way are the younger children, his own daughter, Leela, and the children at the nursery school she attends. The young children are important because they are spontaneous and natural. They have not yet had their natural energy stifled and diverted by the deadening educational system, and are free from rationalism, religion, and other systems of thought.

The most prominent character in the novel, after Krishna and his family, is the headmaster of Leela's school. He is a champion of childhood, having devoted his life to children since receiving the prediction that he would die, and believes they are 'angels' [Ch 6. p. 434], 'the real gods on earth' [Ch 6. p. 423], and employs what he calls 'The Leave Alone System' in his school

Krishna befriends the headmaster, and although at one point he fears that the headmaster is 'a man mentally unsound' [Ch 7. p. 449] he is drawn towards the headmaster's views, which are reinforced by his wife's psychic communication that children are more in tune with the psychic side of life than adults, and at the climax of the novel he decides to work with the headmaster in his nursery school.

In the second half of the novel Krishna's discovery of children as an effective countermeasure against 'the curse of adulthood', and the opening of his mind that he is experiencing through meditation, pave the way for his resignation from his old job and the adoption of a more genuine lifestyle.

We might also see in the headmaster's comment: 'Children have taught me to speak plainly, without the varnish of the adult world.' [Ch 6. p. 433] a clue as to the inspiration behind Narayan's direct, factual, unadorned style of writing.

Another component of Krishna's journey is that he encounters the coexistence of western and native cultural attitudes, which also represent the attitudes of Indians of a newer and older generation. For example when Susila is ill she is treated both by a doctor who practises western scientific medicine, and by a Swamiji who uses mystical methods of healing. The Swamiji is summoned by Susila's mother, representing an older generation than Krishna himself, who believes the 'Evil Eye' [Ch 3. p. 372] has fallen on her daughter, and it is notable that Krishna feels 'ashamed' [Ch 3. p. 373] that the doctor finds the Swamiji in the house, showing that he is alienated from, and embarrassed by, the native culture of the older generation of his own country.

In the event, both the scientific and the mystical attempts at healing fail, and Susila dies. Narayan presents us with the coexistence of these two systems of thought in Indian culture, but does not make an issue of being 'for' one and 'against' another because in the matters of life and death that he wants to focus on here the distinction between western and eastern thought pales into insignificance.

Other instances of the juxtaposition of English and native cultures arise in the novel. For example it may be significant that the street where the headmaster lives, with its poor sanitation, and where 'unkempt and wild-looking children rolled about in the dust' [Ch 6. p. 431] is named Anderson Street, and Anderson may have been 'some gentleman of the East India Company's days!' [Ch 6. p. 431]. But while this observation is potent, it is the observations he wishes to make on the educational system towards the end of the novel which represent the main focus of his attack.

The final stage of Krishna's journey takes him further from the from the western intellectual frame of mind, inherited from the British, in which he was embedded at the opening of the novel, and further towards native Indian spiritual practices. To reach his goal of 'a harmonious existence' [Ch 8. p. 467] he takes up his deceased wife's psychically-communicated challenge, which he receives initially through a medium, to develop his mind sufficiently to communicate with her psychically himself, and bridge the gap between life and life-after-death. Although initially he had been bemused by his wife's devotional practices, mocking her with 'Oh! Becoming a yogi!' [Ch 2. p.325] he now relies on her to guide him, from beyond the grave, in his 'self-development'.

This self-development consists of Zen-like meditation in which, for a certain amount of time each day, he empties his mind. His main motive for undertaking this development is to reach closer psychic communication with his wife, but he also experiences a general improvement in his state of mind as a result.

Compare this to the boredom and spiritual deadness he had come to find in western literature and philosophy and we see how he has found something truly enriching in his native culture. The simple message of 'belief' which his wife offers as the key to his progress also shows how inadequate the western approach, with its 'classifying, labelling, departmentalising' [Ch 8. p. 468] was for his real needs:

In the final chapter the issues of the novel come to a head with Krishna's resignation from his post as English teacher and his psychic reunion with his wife. In his attack on the system he is rebelling against he criticises not English Literature itself 'for who could be insensible to Shakespeare's sonnets, or Ode to the West Wind' [Ch 8. p. 467] but India's adherence to an educational system which stifles the spirit of its students and alienates them from their native culture:

Having thrown off this cultural inheritance from the west, and decided to 'withdraw from the adult world and adult work into the world of children' [Ch 8. p. 472] he is free to take a further step in his traditional Indian self-development and reach a state in which 'one's mind became clean and bare and a mere chamber of fragrance' [Ch 8. p. 473]. He finally learns to experience at the psychic level, and when his wife appears before him he reaches 'a moment of rare, immutable joy - a moment for which one feels grateful to Life and Death.' [Ch 8. p. 474]

In conclusion we might say that the quote 'What about our own roots?' which I chose as the title for this essay could apply to Krishna's journey on a number of levels. It could apply to all of us as adults, alienated from our roots in childhood; to modern Indians, alienated from their native cultural roots; and to humanity as a whole, in that we have become rational human beings, alienated from our roots in the unknown.

At the beginning of The English Teacher we find Krishna to be a sensitive and sincere teacher who is completely wrapped in his work of teaching Carlyle and Milton to the students of Albert Mission College at Malgudi. In the first half of the story Krishna is portrayed as an affectionate and protective father to Leela as well as a doting husband to Susila. But after his wife's death he is forced to face the harsh realities of life and is tortured by feelings of loneliness. He leads a mechanical existence, attending college and looking after his daughter, to whom he is both a mother and father. Krishna was on the verge of committing suicide after his wife's death, but he resisted the temptation because he felt it was his responsibility to bring up his daughter.

Krishna receives a message from an old man that his dead wife is trying to communicate with him through the old man. During their psychic meetings, with the old man acting as a medium, Susila's spirit infuses into the almost-suicidal Krishna the strength and courage to face the harsh realities of life.

Susila's spirit expresses her inability to communicate with Krishna as he is not in the right state of mind to receive her messages. First of all Krishna should rid his mind of all trace of sorrow about her untimely death. In course of time Krishna attains a state of mental readiness to receive her messages without the intervention of the medium.

Krishna develops friendship with a headmaster who runs a kindergarten school. He admits his daughter in the same school. The eccentric headmaster is a refreshing contrast to Krishna. The headmaster doesn't believe in spoon-feeding or excessive discipline and allows the children to play games most of the time, teaching them lessons in between their play. This mode of learning seems to be effective.

The headmaster is a hen-pecked husband. He does not go home for lunch, knowing that his wife will be waiting for him, and chooses to have his meal with Krishna instead. When he goes home the first question he asks his children is, "Is your mother at home?" When they reply, "No" he says, "Excellent" with great relief. His termagant wife does not allow their children to study in his school and brings them up in a wild and barbaric manner.

The headmaster tells Krishna that according to an astrologer's prediction, he will die in a few days' time. His feelings about his own death may perhaps be a psychic phenomenon, or a suicidal wish to escape from his worries and miseries. When the death for which he waits so calmly does not come, he cuts off all his connections with his family and treats himself as dead and his life as a new birth. The irony lies in the fact that although he proves to be a good teacher and a good headmaster to his students, he is a failure in the role of a father to his own children, for he fails miserably in bringing them up.

The headmaster exerts a distinct influence in transforming Krishna's life. Krishna resigns his job at college as he finds it meaningless, and joins the headmaster's school as a teacher. He finally attains peace of mind and realises that life will have meaning for him from then onwards. He gradually overcomes his grief over the loss of his wife and finds happiness and fulfilment in bringing up his young daughter. He no longer requires the presence of Susila's spirit to infuse confidence in him to face life, though Susila's spirit remains with him forever.

According to Harish Raizada The English Teacher , as an autobiographical novel, completes a trilogy along with his other two novels 'Swami and Friends' and 'The Bachelor of Arts'. It depicts man as bearing 'the sweet and bitter fruits of life.'

[3] says that the description of Krishna's married life - the first few years of happiness, the excruciating agony during the weeks of Susila's illness, the 'last journey' to the cremation ground - is one of the most moving and flawless pieces of writing in modern English fiction. Not a word is wasted and not a word rings false. The second half of the novel, however, takes us to unfamiliar regions. Krishna's numbed misery and his wish to be both a mother and a father to Leela are understandable enough, but the experiments in psychic communication with Susila with the help of a medium introduce a whimsical or fantastic element into a story which, up to that point, had been transparently true to life. The eccentric headmaster of the 'pyol' school and his termagant wife and their wild children make for further seemingly incongruous elements.

Automatic writing and attempts at psychic contact with the dead are not altogether uncommon: and the soil of India doubtless breeds every type of idealist and eccentric, waif and vagabond. Nevertheless it is difficult to feel that the first and second halves of 'The English Teacher' blend naturally and make an artistic whole. The theme of the novel is obviously the 'death' of Susila in the first half, and her 'resurrection' in the second half. Paradise Lost being followed by paradise Regained. Krishna loses Susila in the flesh, but on the last page of the novel she comes back to him, to be with him forever.

Is Krishna dreaming? Is it anything more than the physical projection of Krishna's psychic ecstasy? Isn't this a resurrection greater than life? 'The boundaries of our personalities suddenly dissolved' Krishna concludes his autobiographical narrative. 'It was a moment of rare, immutable joy - a moment for which one feels grateful to life and death'.

According to Professor P S Sundaram , The English Teacher is a novel with a difference, not only in the type of love between Krishna and Susila that is depicted, but also in the author's bold excursion into the realms of the dead. But then one is inclined to accept K. R. Srinivasa Iyengar's view when he asks 'Is Krishna dreaming? Is it any more than an apocalyptic vision of Krishna's psychic ecstasy? Isn't this a resurrection greater than life!'

Narayan, R. K. The English Teacher, in A Malgudi Omnibus. London: Vintage, Random House. 1999. First published in England by Eyre and Spottiswoode 1945 [2] Patten, Brian. 'An Incident', from Armada. London: Flamingo. 1996 [3] K. R. Srinivasa Iyengar. R. K. Narayan: Indian Writing in English. 6th ed. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers pvt ltd. 1987.

© Ian Mackean, January 2001 © S. N. Radhika Lakshmi, January 2001

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The English teacher

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The English Teacher

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book review of the english teacher by rk narayan

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R. K. Narayan

The English Teacher Paperback – January 1, 2006

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  • Print length 180 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher Vintage Books
  • Publication date January 1, 2006
  • Dimensions 5.08 x 0.47 x 7.8 inches
  • ISBN-10 0099282283
  • ISBN-13 978-0099282280
  • See all details

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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Vintage Books (January 1, 2006)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 180 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0099282283
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0099282280
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.08 x 0.47 x 7.8 inches
  • Best Sellers Rank: #2,345,838 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books )

About the author

R. k. narayan.

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book review of the english teacher by rk narayan

IMAGES

  1. "Book Review of R.K. Narayan's Novel, 'The English Teacher'"

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  2. The English Teacher by R K NARAYAN-Buy Online The English Teacher Edition edition (1 December

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  4. The English Teacher by NARAYAN, R.K.

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  6. English Teacher (Hindi Translation)

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VIDEO

  1. An English talk by RK Narayan || English in India

  2. Book review. ( English For Today- Class-3)

  3. R.K. Narayan| Indian English Literature

  4. The English Teacher, by RK Narayan. Review by Vivvaan Bajpayee

  5. The Guide novel by R. K. Narayan in English || full analysis

  6. English ll+2 2nd year ll The doctor's word ll +2 internal exam English syllabus 2025 ll +2 exam 2025

COMMENTS

  1. The English Teacher by R.K. Narayan

    R.K. Narayan. 3.81. 4,388 ratings319 reviews. This novel completes the informal trilogy which began with "Swami and Friends" and "The Bachelor of Arts," The protagonist, Krishna, is an English teacher at the same college he had attended as a student. Although Krishna has recently married, his wife Susila and their daughter live with his parents ...

  2. Book Review: The English Teacher by R. K. Narayan

    The book is based on common but riveting theme - conflicts of characters. It is a super-class novel for all sorts of readers. In fact, the only writer of India, of whose books can be enjoyed equally by both parents and children. It's an incredible feat so far, remained untouched. Krishna is an English teacher, who is unhappy with his ...

  3. The English Teacher

    The English Teacher is a 1945 novel written by R. K. Narayan.It is a part of a series of novels and collections of short stories set in "Malgudi". The English Teacher was preceded by Swami and Friends (1935), The Bachelor of Arts (1937) and Malgudi Days, (1943) and followed by Mr. Sampath - The Printer of Malgudi.. This novel, dedicated to Narayan's wife Rajam, is not only autobiographical ...

  4. The English Teacher by RK Narayan Summary • English Summary

    Introduction. RK Narayan's The English Teacher came sometime after The Dark Room as the author had a tough time dealing with the death of his wife Rajam. This story is an autobiography of Narayan and he has used his pain and travails into the narration. This is a unique love story of a 30 something, English lecturer named Krishna in Malgudi ...

  5. The English Teacher

    The English Teacher by RK Narayan. I love the writing of Narayan, in part because it is such clean writing. I get terribly bored with overly adjectival writing. Our most recommended books. ... Five Books participates in the Amazon Associate program and earns money from qualifying purchases.

  6. Book Reviews: The English Teacher, by R. K. Narayan ...

    Mark Tully Krishnan is often seen as RK Narayan. I have chosen it as a tribute to Narayan, who was internationally discovered by Graham Greene. I love the writing of Graham Greene and I love the writing of Narayan, in part because it is such clean writing. I get terribly bored with overly adjectival writing.

  7. The English Teacher Summary

    R.K. Narayan's The English Teacher is set in the made-up Indian town of Malgudi, a common setting for his stories, and gives a glimpse into India's education system during the 1940s.The book ...

  8. The English Teacher- R K Narayan- A self-healing book review

    R K Narayan's The English Teacher was a book I picked randomly after browsing my modest library for a while. I was reading English classics for some time and as I was recovering from a ...

  9. The English Teacher

    R. K. Narayan (1906—2001) witnessed nearly a century of change in his native India and captured it in fiction of uncommon warmth and vibrancy. The title character in The English Teacher, Narayan's most autobiographical novel, searches for meaning when the death of his young wife deprives him of his greatest source of happiness. This pioneering novel, luminous in its detail and refreshingly ...

  10. The English Teacher

    The English Teacher. This novel completes the informal trilogy which began with Swami and Friends and The Bachelor of Arts. The protagonist, Krishna, is an English teacher at the same college he had attended as a student. Although Krishna has recently married, his wife Susila and their daughter live with his parents-in-law some miles away.

  11. What about our own roots? Krishnan's journey in The English Teacher

    English Literature Essays Krishnan's journey in The English Teacher. . . something has been drained from the adult heart. Belief in the miraculous closes down [2]. Krishna, the central character in The English Teacher, by R. K. Narayan (1906-2001) undertakes an emotional, intellectual, and spiritual journey during the course of the novel.At the start of the novel he is an English teacher ...

  12. The English Teacher

    The English Teacher is R.K. Narayan's greatest among his works. This was his third novel. It was published in 1945. It is the loveliest, nicest, and most sensitive love story and spiritual romance ever written. It is the love storey of Krishna, the English teacher, and his wife, the vivacious Susila. Both have a deep and abiding love for one another. Their love is genuine and unwavering, and ...

  13. The English teacher : Narayan, R. K., 1906-2001

    Books. An illustration of two cells of a film strip. Video An illustration of an audio speaker. ... The English teacher by Narayan, R. K., 1906-2001. Publication date 1980 ... The protagonist, Krishna, is an English teacher at the same college he had attended as a student. Although Krishna has recently married, his wife Susila and their ...

  14. The English Teacher

    R. K. Narayan. Vintage, 2001 - Fiction - 180 pages. Krishna, an English teacher in the town of Malgudi, nagged by the feeling he's doing the wrong work, is nonetheless delighted by his domestic life, where his wife and young daughter wait for him outside the house every afternoon. Devastated by the death of his wife, Krishna comes to realise ...

  15. The English Teacher: Novel by R. K. Narayan

    The English Teacher is the third of the trilogy that began with Swami and Friends, and The Bachelor of Arts. The author R. K. Narayan dedicates this book to his wife Rajam. This is not only autobiographical but also affects and depicts its intensity of feeling. The story is a series of experiences in Krishnan's life.

  16. The English Teacher by R. K. Narayan: 9780345803825

    About The English Teacher. R. K. Narayan (1906—2001) witnessed nearly a century of change in his native India and captured it in fiction of uncommon warmth and vibrancy. The title character in The English Teacher, Narayan's most autobiographical novel, searches for meaning when the death of his young wife deprives him of his greatest source ...

  17. The English Teacher: R. K. Narayan: 9788185986036: Amazon.com: Books

    The English Teacher. Paperback - December 1, 2007. by R. K. Narayan (Author) 4.5 706 ratings. See all formats and editions. This novel completes the informal trilogy which began with Swami and Friends and The Bachelor of Arts. The protagonist, Krishna, is an English teacher at the same college he had attended as a student.

  18. Best Books by R.K. Narayan

    "The English Teacher" is the third book in the Malgudi series. It is semi-autobiographical, drawing from R.K. Narayan's own experiences and emotions. As we delve into "The English Teacher," we traverse a narrative that probes the depths of human emotion, prompting us to reflect on our journey through joy, sorrow, and the pursuit of ...

  19. The English teacher: Narayan, R. K: 9780434496044: Amazon.com: Books

    The English teacher. Hardcover - January 1, 1978. by R. K Narayan (Author) 4.1 76 ratings. See all formats and editions. While Krishna teaches at the Albert Mission College his wife and daughter live some distance away with his parents-in-law. But a move to a small rented house soon permits the couple to enjoy a life of marital bliss.

  20. The English Teacher

    The English Teacher. "This novel completes the informal trilogy which began with Swami and Friends and The Bachelor of Arts. The protagonist, Krishna, is an English teacher at the same college he had attended as a student. Although Krishna has recently married, his wife Susila and their daughter live with his parents-in-law some miles away.

  21. The English Teacher: R. K. Narayan: 9780099282280: Amazon.com: Books

    Paperback. $14.71 8 Used from $3.78 7 New from $9.61. This novel completes the informal trilogy which began with "Swami and Friends" and "The Bachelor of Arts," The protagonist, Krishna, is an English teacher at the same college he had attended as a student. Although Krishna has recently married, his wife Susila and their daughter live with his ...

  22. THE ENGLISH TEACHER, R.K. Narayan

    THE ENGLISH TEACHER BY R K NARAYAN. I read the review of this book narrated by Kirti V and ordered my book on Amazon. At the beginning I was wondering what is this story about by then as I started reading it I found it interesting. The brief review has already being shared by Ms Kirti . You will enjoy reading this book. Source Amazon

  23. The English Teacher

    LibraryThing Review User Review - jklavanian - LibraryThing. Third in a series that takes place in the fictional town of Malgudi in India. I thought the whole trilogy was very accessible for "Western" readers. But this story takes a metaphysical turn about halfway through, and, for me, made it an effort to finish. Read full review