Tokyo Cancelled

Tokyo Cancelled is Rana Dasgupta's debut novel, published in 2005, and revolves around thirteen different passengers stranded in an airport, each telling a separate tale to pass the time. The novel, considered a work of the magic realist genre, or perhaps irrealism, presents short stories tenuously linked together by their use of fairy-tale like narratives, as well as an overarching theme of modern globalization. The novel was short-listed for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize (UK) and the Hutch Crossword Book Award (India). One tale from the book was short-listed for the BBC National Short Story Prize.

Tokyo Cancelled can be read as a compendium of fairy-tales from the modern world, expressing the dark and irrealistic side of life in the 21st century. Unlike the idealized, moralistic endings of classic fairy-tales, the modern world cannot be so easily read.

Table of contents

The separate chapters in the novel, often broken up by comments from the airplane passengers, are as follows:

The number thirteen

The number thirteen seems to carry some significance in the novel, as it is mentioned on several occasions. First of all, there are thirteen passengers left in the airport, each with their own unique tale. In "The Tailor," the elders of the king's court note that the tailor's story has all the thirteen levels of meaning. In "The House of the Frankfurt Mapmaker," there is mention of thirteen dresses. Likewise, in "The Store on Madison Avenue," Chu Yu Tang has thirteen daughters. In "The Rendevouz in Istanbul," Riad bets on the number thirteen while gambling at roulette for money to convince Natalia to sleep with him. He thinks the number unlucky, bets on it for that very reason, and wins. In "The Changeling," Fareed sings thirteen songs, one for each day of his time in the garden, and then dies. In "The Recycler of Dreams," a chapter with thirteen sections, Gustavo records the dreams of his thirteen homeless boarders. The number thirteen appears elsewhere, suggesting some importance of the number to the overall understanding of the novel.