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Saturday, March 8, 2025

Naipaul better myth than man

by

20110709

Four years ago, I ful­filled a dream: I met Sir Vidya Naipaul. I didn't just meet him, I spoke to him. And he even spoke back...twice. But for the read­ers of this col­umn who re­mem­ber the in­ci­dent, it wasn't with­out in­ci­dent. Naipaul, my idol, was de­fen­sive with me. His wife, the un­equalled La­dy Nadi­ra, de­fend­ed him from me...phys­i­cal­ly. But it was not to be the last time he spoke to me, or rather about me.When one en­gages Naipaul, one risks los­ing face; if his wife is in­volved, per­haps al­so an eye­ball or tes­ti­cle. Even as the de­tached jour­nal­ist, his words sting, no mat­ter who they're about.In the past month, Naipaul's name has been splashed in news­pa­pers from The Times in Lon­don to The Times in New York. In an in­ter­view, the 2001 No­bel lau­re­ate had said: "I read a piece of writ­ing and with­in a para­graph or two I know whether it is by a woman or not. I think (it is) un­equal to me."

He crit­i­cised women au­thors for their "sen­ti­men­tal­i­ty" and "nar­row view of the world," since "a woman is not a com­plete mas­ter of a house". He went on to re­ject even Jane Austen for her "sen­ti­men­tal am­bi­tions" and his own for­mer ed­i­tor Di­ana Athill for writ­ing "fem­i­nine tosh".The back­lash from proud women writ­ers at Naipaul's prej­u­dice was stern and swift. "Misog­y­nist p----, slug, mon­key" they called him, while dis­miss­ing both his re­cent works as ob­so­lete and his char­ac­ter as pa­thet­ic.

'Give it to some n-----'

Of course, Jane Austin and women writ­ers every­where are not the first to be vil­i­fied by Naipaul: EM Forster is a ho­mo­sex­u­al ex­ploiter of the pow­er­less; James Joyce; Charles Dick­ens; W Som­er­set Maugh­am; even Derek Wal­cott's "tal­ent had been all but stran­gled by his colo­nial set­ting".He's done the same to pub­lic fig­ures: Princess Anne's daugh­ter "has a crim­i­nal face" and Tony Blair is a "ple­beian".He's done the same to en­tire peo­ples: "Ital­ians make cheese out of dirt." "Africans need to be kicked-that's the on­ly thing they un­der­stand." Forty years ago, peo­ple in In­dia were not in­tel­lec­tu­al enough to read his books. Is­lam had a "calami­tous ef­fect" on the world. And, of course, West In­di­ans are "slaves".

With un­par­al­leled sting, Naipaul scorns "ne­groes at (Princess Di­ana's) shrines, weep­ing open­ly." On Sir Viv Richards and his In­di­an wife hav­ing a ba­by: "How could she have a child by that n-----?" And on pos­si­bly win­ning the No­bel prize in 1988: "They'll give it to some n----- or oth­er."He's done the same in his per­son­al life. To his lov­ing for­mer prot&ea­cute;g&ea­cute; Paul Th­er­oux, who be­came crit­i­cal of his work, Naipaul re­fused to ac­knowl­edge him while they shared a stage at the Hay Arts Fes­ti­val.

And to his first wife, Pat, he open­ly cheat­ed, vis­it­ed pros­ti­tutes and kept a mis­tress he vi­o­lent­ly beat. He mar­ried Nadi­ra two months af­ter Pat's death, le­git­imis­ing an af­fair he had car­ried on as Pat was dy­ing from breast can­cer.That's Naipaul the man, the 79-year-old man who's called the great­est liv­ing writer in Eng­lish prose. And this would be all well and good ex­cept for one thing.

The im­por­tance of the 'turd'

While in Trinidad in 2007, the year I met him, he said: "A writer is not the man, but the myth." In­deed, when we think of writ­ers of yore, their leg­ends are what come to mind, not how many cats they had. Think of Ernest Hem­ing­way, and you think not of the man, but of the heavy-drink­ing, bull­fight­ing-lov­ing dare­dev­il who had a file with the FBI.

With his cute, squint­ing eyes, Naipaul spoke calm­ly at UWI 2007, apol­o­gis­ing in ad­vance for any­thing "of­fen­sive". He smiled a lot, shook many hands and ap­peared rather gra­cious. He seemed to be try­ing to ame­lio­rate his own dam­aged rep­u­ta­tion of the bit­ter, ar­ro­gant, "misog­y­nist p----".Even as he open­ly dissed me to my face and in front of re­porters and cam­eras from the world over, there was the nu­ance of com­pas­sion, as­suag­ing the blow to my ego. I felt, at the time, that his great­ness li­censed him to say what he did.

It wasn't un­til a year lat­er at the T&T Film Fes­ti­val when Naipaul spoke to me again. In Are­na: The Strange Luck of VS Naipaul, al­most a year to the day we met, the film showed, of all the footage tak­en from his land­mark vis­it to Trinidad, on­ly his en­counter with me. And Naipaul spoke. "...here was this young fel­low, who was prob­a­bly 25 while I was 75, try­ing to put me in my place. What a turd, an ab­solute turd..."To­day, in 2011, I have fi­nal­ly rec­on­ciled with my en­counter with Naipaul. That an unim­por­tant 25-year-old in Trinidad could im­pact him to such an ex­tent showed that, for all of his great­ness, he is just a man.

It ap­pears as though he al­ready lives not as the man but as his own myth. But that myth is still be­ing fash­ioned, and this he must re­mem­ber. Be­cause for all the great­ness he at­trib­ut­es to him­self, to­day and to­mor­row are the judges of that myth. And, by all pos­si­ble in­di­ca­tions, the myth that his­to­ry will at­tribute to Naipaul is not the myth he clear­ly at­trib­ut­es to him­self.


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