The God of Small Things is a notable literary work by Arundhati Roy. A complete discussion of this literary work is given, which will help you enhance your literary skills and prepare for the exam. Read the Main texts, Key info, Summary, Themes, Characters, Literary devices, Quotations, Notes, and various study materials of The God of Small Things.
Brief Questions in The God of Small Things
Ans: She won the Booker Prize in London on 14 October 1997.
Ans: Estha and Rahel, fraternal twins living with their mother Ammu.
Ans: A moth with unusually dense dorsal tufts; he thought it new.
Ans: Dapper, carefully groomed, chin hidden, proud but controlled.
Ans: Polite outwardly, yet marked by cruelty and buried violence.
Ans: Her public success as a pickle maker eclipsed him.
Ans: He beat Mammachi nightly with a flower vase.
Ans: He called Pappachi an Anglophile who aped the English.
Ans: After Pappachi retired and returned to Ayemenem.
Ans: She mourned out of habit and duty, not love.
Ans: For her working-class background and for leaving Chacko.
Ans: Navomi Ipe, daughter of Reverend E. John Ipe.
Ans: Called “Baby” in youth; became “Kochamma” as an aunt.
Ans: Youth renounced worldly life; old age embraced it.
Ans: Publicly bathed a peasant child to appear charitable.
Ans: Makeup, fine saris, TV serials, English films, football.
Ans: Mammachi and Pappachi’s son; Oxford-educated factory owner.
Ans: She chose Joe, a biologist, over him.
Ans: Lectured, flirted, drank with them, calling them comrades.
Ans: Chicken roast, chips, sweet corn, soup, parathas, ice cream.
Ans: Sophie Mol’s death devastated him utterly.
Ans: Humans are unmoored prisoners, adrift on troubled seas.
Ans: Pappachi and Mammachi’s daughter; mother of Estha and Rahel.
Ans: In 1962, during the Sino-Indian war.
Ans: He demanded she sleep with his boss to keep work.
Ans: A rude cultural remark made Ammu storm off.
Ans: Lonely divorcee, she found forbidden love with Velutha.
Ans: In a grimy room at Bharat Lodge, Alleppey.
Ans: He defied caste barriers and chose personal dignity.
Ans: Yes; brutally killed by police, a martyr.
Ans: Chacko and Margaret’s daughter; Estha and Rahel’s cousin.
Ans: Yellow bellbottoms and a Made-in-England go-go bag.
Ans: Joe raised her; Chacko left earlier; Joe died later.
Ans: She quickly became their close friend.
Ans: Boating on the nearby Meenachal River.
Ans: It struck a floating log in the darkness.
Ans: She loved family members the elders disliked.
Ans: Ammu’s son and Rahel’s twin brother.
Ans: “Esthapappychachen Peter Mon,” whispered by Rahel.
Ans: After Ammu divorced, when they were two.
Ans: Baby Kochamma, often unkind and strict.
Ans: Housework—sweeping, laundry, cooking, shopping.
Ans: She drifted through schools, largely neglected.
Ans: Larry McCaslin, an architecture researcher in Delhi.
Ans: Larry sensed her detachment, eyes searching for Estha.
Ans: Ayemenem (Aymanam) in Kerala, Roy’s childhood place.
Ans: Both were untouchable in society’s eyes.
Ans: The Orangedrink Lemondrink man at the cinema.
Ans: Margaret Kochamma, then a café waitress.
Ans: The Sound of Music.
Ans: Undergraduate at Delhi; Rhodes Scholar at Oxford.
Ans: To win Father Mulligan’s affection.
Ans: Ammu and Chacko’s father; a noted entomologist.
Ans: Pappachi’s sister, the children’s grandaunt.
Ans: He was an active Marxist Communist party worker.
Ans: Abusively; he beat her with a brass vase.
Ans: The scientific study of insects.
Ans: She drowned after the boat struck a floating log.
Ans: His age gap; feeling old while Mammachi seemed young.
Ans: Conversion and becoming a nun still couldn’t win the priest.
Ans: A man she called “the god of small things,” Velutha.
Ans: Velutha, the tender god of forbidden, small things.
