The White Tiger Summary Next Chapter 1: The First Night The White Tiger is the story of Balram Halwai’s life as a self-declared “self-made entrepreneur”: a rickshaw driver’s son who skillfully climbs India’s social ladder to become a chauffer and later a successful businessman. Balram recounts his life story in a letter to visiting Chinese official Premier Wen Jiabao, with the goal of educating the premier about entrepreneurship in India. Click here.

 

The White Tiger Summary



The White Tiger is the story of Balram Halwai’s life as a self-declared “self-made entrepreneur”: a rickshaw 

driver’s son who skillfully climbs India’s social ladder to become a chauffer and later a successful

 businessman. Balram recounts his life story in a letter to visiting Chinese official Premier Wen Jiabao,

 with the goal of educating the premier about entrepreneurship in India.

Balram writes from his luxurious office in the city of Bangalore, but the story begins in his rural 

ancestral village of Laxmangahr. Throughout his childhood, Balram’s destitute family lives at 

the mercy of four cruel, exploitative landlords, referred to as “The Animals”: The RavenThe Stork

The Buffalo, and The Wild Boar. Despite the difficult life he is born into, Balram excels in school.

 His academic potential and personal integrity distinguish him from his classmates, bringing him 

to the attention of a visiting school inspector who nicknames him “the White Tiger,” after the 

most rare and intelligent creature in the jungle.

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Balram’s parents recognize his potential and want him to complete his education, but his 

grandmother Kusum removes him from school early on so that he can work to support the family. 

Balram is determined to continue his education however he can. When he and his brother Kishan 

begin working in a teashop in nearby Dhanbad, Balram neglects his duties and spends his days 

listening to customers’ conversations. He overhears one customer speaking wistfully about the 

high earnings and easy life that India’s private chauffeurs enjoy, and begs his grandmother

 to send him to driving school. Kusum agrees, but Balram must promise to send home his wages 

once he finds a job.

His training complete, Balram knocks on the doors of Dhanbad’s rich families, offering

 his services. By a stroke of luck, he arrives at the mansion of the Stork (one of Laxmangahr’s

 animal landlords) one day after the Stork’s son, Mr. Ashok, returns from America with 

his wife Pinky Madam. The family hires Balram to become Ashok’s driver.

 In reality, Balram is more of a general servant to the family, while another servant, 

Ram Persad, has the privilege of driving them.

Balram learns that the Stork’s family fortune comes from illegally selling coal out of 

government mines. They bribe ministers to turn a blind eye to their fraudulent business 

and allow the family to avoid paying income tax. Unfortunately, the family recently had

 a disagreement with the region’s ruling politician, referred to as the Great Socialist

The family dispatches Ashok and Pinky to Delhi, where Ashok will distribute more 

bribes to make amends. When Balram learns that the couple will need a driver 

in Delhi, he schemes to have Ram Persad dismissed, and goes in his place.

Once in Delhi, Balram witnesses Pinky and Ashok’s marriage rapidly

 fall apart.  When driving the couple around Delhi, Balram keeps his eyes on the road

 and when spoken to, he looks at Ashok and his wife's  chin or forehead when acknowledging 

them but never at the body.     

Pinky returns to the US and

 leaves her husband after she kills a young child in a drunken, hit-and-run accident. 

In her absence, Ashok goes out to bars and clubs, hiring a prostitute one night,

 and reconnecting with a former lover on another. Observing his master’s

 gradual corruption and driving him through Dehli’s seedier districts, Balram 

becomes disillusioned and resentful. 

Although Ashok is a relatively kind master, Balram realizes that whatever generosity

 Ashok has shown him is only a fraction of what he can afford. Ashok has no real interest

 in helping Balram achieve a better life, or in changing the status quo.

Balram plans to murder Ashok and escape with the bag of the money that 

he carries around the city to bribe politicians. In addition to the risk of being caught, 

Balram must contend with the logic of “the Rooster Coop”: the system of oppression

 in which India’s poor, including Balram himself, are trapped. Balram knows 

that if he kills Ashok, Ashok’s family will murder all his own relatives in

 Laxmangahr in retaliation. Balram is also held back by the arrival

 in Delhi of his young cousin Dharam, who Kusum sends from 

Dhanbad with the demand that Balram help raise him.

Balram finally resolves to proceed with the murder, 

using a weapon he has fashioned out of a broken liquor bottle. 

One day as he drives Ashok to deliver a particularly large bribe, 

Balram pretends that there is a mechanical problem with the car.

 He pulls over, convinces Ashok to kneel down and examine 

the wheel, then brings the broken bottle down on Ashok’s head. 

After killing his master, he returns to Ashok’s apartment, collects Dharam, 

and escapes with his young cousin to Bangalore.

Once Balram regains his nerves in Bangalore enough not to fear 

immediate capture, he begins wandering the city and listening to 

conversations in cafes –just as he did in the teashop in 

Dhanbad—to plan his next move. He soon learns that Bangalore’s business 

world revolves around outsourcing, and that many large technology companies 

work on a nocturnal schedule. Balram creates a taxi company called White Tiger 

Drivers to bring call center workers home safely at night, and the venture is an 

enormous success.

By the time he sits down to tell his story, Balram is a wealthy man who keeps to himself, 

still fearful that one day his crime will be discovered. However, he concludes his letter

 to Wen Jiabao claiming that even if he is found out, he will never regret his crime:

 it was worth committing simply because it enabled him to 

experience life as a free man rather than as a servant.

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