In an age of literary noise—where novels compete for attention through sensationalism, where market forces dictate creative expression, and where the "roaring terror" of ideological posturing often drowns out authentic voices—the fiction of Vinod Kumar Shukla arrives like a quiet revolution. His is not the literature of grand gestures or political manifestos, but something far more radical: an "aesthetics of silence" that speaks volumes through what remains unsaid.
Through three remarkable works—"Naukar ki Kamiz" (The Servant's Shirt), "Khilega to Dekhenge" (It Will Bloom, We Shall See), and the masterpiece "Diwar mein Ek Khirki Rahti Thi" (There Used to Be a Window in the Wall)—Shukla has crafted a narrative universe where the ordinary becomes extraordinary, where silence carries more weight than rhetoric, and where the average Indian human being finds dignified artistic representation.
What distinguishes Shukla from his contemporaries is the poetic sensibility he brings to prose. Born in 1937 in Rajnandgaon, Chhattisgarh, Shukla emerged as a poet before venturing into fiction, and this dual identity shapes every aspect of his narrative art. His sentences breathe with a rhythm that is unmistakably lyrical yet never pretentious. Consider this passage from "Diwar mein Ek Khirki Rahti Thi": "There was no watch. But there was the sense of continuity. The sky's being was continuous. The sky stable, yet its being continuous. Like the continuous falling of water in a steady waterfall." Here, philosophical meditation emerges from the simplest observations, transforming the mundane into the transcendent.
This poetic prose achieves what the critic Mangalesh Dabral calls "a great event"—the poet removing his mask, upper garments, and ornaments to become "almost defenseless." The result is a language capable of recognizing reality in its rawest form while simultaneously transforming it through artistic vision.
The title of Shukla's most celebrated novel contains within itself the central concern of his entire creative endeavor. The window in the wall represents that essential aperture between inner and outer worlds, between the self and society, between tradition and modernity. The use of "thi" (used to be) is deliberately expressive—suggesting that this window, once common in Indian family and social life, is now endangered. In our era of globalization and market dominance, Shukla suggests, the Indian human being has become "hidden to oneself," a stranger to their own emotional landscape. The window must be reopened so that "the traffic between our inner world and external life and world continues." This is not nostalgia but a call for conscious preservation of what makes us human—the capacity for genuine connection, for communal feeling, for love that transcends utilitarian calculation.
One of the most striking aspects of Shukla's fiction is what might be called a "cenobite economy"—an implicit critique of consumerism and market dictatorship. In an era when Marx and Engels observed that capitalism leaves "no other nexus between man and man than naked self-interest, than callous 'cash payment,'" Shukla's characters embody an alternative value system. The protagonist of "Naukar ki Kamiz," Santu Babu, works as a servant but maintains a dignity that transcends his economic position. When he finally tears the shirt that symbolizes his servitude, it is an act of quiet rebellion against "the system based on deceit, hypocrisy, looting, and inequality." Similarly, Raghuvar Prasad in "Diwar mein Ek Khirki Rahti Thi" teaches mathematics on a meager salary of eight hundred rupees yet dreams: "If the salary were good I would show how a son cares for his father." The economic deprivation is real, but it does not define these characters. What defines them is their capacity for love, for wonder, for joy.
Shukla shares with Latin American magical realists a profound connection to communal life and collective consciousness. In his novels, the boundary between the natural and supernatural dissolves not through fantastic events but through a heightened perception of the ordinary. When Sonasi, walking with her husband Raghuvar Prasad, feels the moon sitting on his shoulder, when a green parrot alights on her arm "sounding ting-ting," when the pond waits for their arrival—these moments achieve what the critic Angel Flores calls "a strange combination of reality and dream-pictures." Yet Shukla's magic remains rooted in the soil of Chhattisgarh, in the rhythms of rural life, in the tadbhava words created by common people rather than the Sanskritized tatsama vocabulary of scholars.
Perhaps the most profound dimension of Shukla's fiction is the "aesthetics of silence"—a deliberate restraint that allows meaning to emerge through what is not said. In an age of screaming headlines and performative outrage, Shukla's characters speak softly, if at all. Their agony is expressed through what remains unexpressed. This silence is not evasion but wisdom. As the Chinese proverb reminds us: "Birds do not sing because they have answers to questions. They sing because they have songs." Shukla's fiction sings not because it has answers to the problems of modern India but because it has songs—songs of ordinary people living ordinary lives with extraordinary dignity.
Underlying all of Shukla's work is what might be called "man's intense will to live." This is not the survival instinct of Social Darwinism but something more spiritual—an affirmation of life even in the face of overwhelming odds. In one of his poems, from the collection "Sab Kuchh Honā Bachā Rahegā" (Everything Will Remain by Being), Shukla writes:
"One human being, like the human species
jumps into a pit to save his life
as soon as he hears the siren
A pregnant woman walking on the edge of the pit
carefully descends into the pit
to give birth to a human child."
This is the same will to live that Shukla's characters embody—not as heroic individuals but as representatives of "the average Indian human being." Their struggles are not epic but everyday; their victories not dramatic but cumulative; their significance not exceptional but representative.
As Indian fiction navigates the challenges of globalization, market forces, and cultural homogenization, Shukla's example offers both inspiration and warning. Inspiration because he demonstrates that authentic creativity can flourish outside metropolitan centers, can draw sustenance from local traditions, can speak to universal human concerns without abandoning regional specificity. Warning because his work also reveals how easily such voices can be marginalized, how quickly the "cultural deafness of Hindi society" can render them inaudible.
In the final analysis, Vinod Kumar Shukla's achievement is to have created what Milan Kundera called "the map of the existence of human possibilities." On this map, the ordinary becomes extraordinary, silence becomes eloquence, and the average Indian human being becomes a figure of dignity and wonder. It is an achievement that will continue to reward readers for generations to come—provided we have the patience to listen, the sensitivity to feel, and the wisdom to recognize that sometimes the deepest truths are spoken in whispers.
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*Professor and former Head of the Department of Hindi at the University of Hyderabad. This is the abridged version of the author's original paper

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