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  1. The Bachelor of Arts. Swami and Friends is the first of a series of novels written by R. K. Narayan (1906–2001), English language novelist from India. The novel, the first book Narayan wrote, is set in British India in a town called Malgudi. The second and third books in the trilogy are The Bachelor of Arts and The English Teacher .

  2. Swami and Friends Summary. Next. Chapter 1. A young boy named Swami wakes up on Monday morning in the town of Malgudi in South India. He rushes through his homework at his desk in his father ’s room and then goes to the Mission School, where he is bored throughout most of his classes. Swami gets a bad grade on his mathematics homework and ...

  3. Swami and Friends 4 R. K. Narayan Dear Friends, this is a backup copy of the original works in my personal library. I had a bad luck in getting back the books I lend to my friends. I am trying to make the text in digital form to ensure that I am not going to loose any of them. As I

  4. In Swami and Friends I was surprised, having first read it a decade ago, and retaining a clear memory of Swami’s character, but less of the events of the story, coming across his quite serious involvement in the protests arising out of the boycotting of Lancashire and Manchester cloth. It was a response to the impact of British woven cloth on the domestic product and the brutal tactics of some colonial manufacturers who cut off the thumbs of some Indian weavers.

  5. Mani. Known as “the Mighty Good-For-Nothing,” Mani is Swami ’s other closest friend. Mani is a fearless troublemaker who never does his homework, sleeps in class, and frequently resorts to violence to solve his problems. However… read analysis of Mani.

  6. The novel Swami and Friends is an episodic narrative that follows the daily life of Swaminatharian, a charismatic and lazy schoolboy, in the fictional South Indian town of Malgudi with his father, mother, and granny. He attends the Albert Mission School and has an established cadre of friends, including Samuel "the Pea," Sankar, Somu, and Mani ...

  7. Swami and Friends also shares characteristics with a wide range of novels about groups of friends attending boys’ schools and struggling for autonomy in the face of domineering authority figures. One notable example is Rudyard Kipling’s story collection Stalky and Co. , which Narayan’s friend and advocate Graham Greene saw as a parallel to Narayan’s early stories about Swami.

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