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'The Desire of the Moth' is a novel written by Eugene Manlove Rhodes. The story begins while John Wesley Pringle is on a leisurely ride from Prescott to the Rio Grande. As he traverses through the landscape, he takes in the view of the desert, the distant San Mateo and Magdalena mountains, and the Mesilla Valley below, with Las Uvas and its lush greenery. The vast unknown land before him gives the impression of an infinite ocean rushing towards him.
A fifteen-year-old widow runs across a bridge to catch a train bound for Trichi. Sowmya is running away to make sense of the events that had seized her body and her mind, and had ripped apart her world. She is determined to flee her destiny of numbing isolation within her community, the Brahmins of the Thanjavur district in South India. Her plans pivot when she meets a devadasi--an aging dancer--in her compartment. When the woman Mallika opens her drawstring bag and buys Sowmya her dinner, Sowmya recognizes what she needs to overcome her own condition, that of a young woman in possession of a thin cotton sari, a head shorn clean, and little else. She asks Mallika how she too can achieve that kind of power--the power to open a bag and pull out money. Thus begins Sowmya's transformation in the city by the sea, Madras, which is in the grip of its own political and social changes while India is struggling to seize its independence from the imperial British raj. Here she learns the beauty of dance from Mallika, and the sweetness and agony of falling in love with a married man. The cinema brings unimagined opportunities and all the power and riches that she could desire, but it also consumes her relentlessly. When a letter arrives, Sowmya begins her quest to regain everything that had been lost when she once lived in that small village tucked into a little bend of the Kaveri River. Hear Champa Bilwakesh reading from Desire of the Moth here: http://voicethread.com/myvoice/#thread/5863247/30058528/31699244
In 'A Streetcar Named Desire: The Moth and the Lantern' Thomas P. Adler provides a provocative analysis of one of Tennessee William's classic plays.