Vaikom Muhammad Basheer, one of India’s greatest storytellers, wrote this novel while drawing from his own time in British India’s Central Jail (1930s). It is barely 100 pages long, but it contains more emotion than most 500-page epics.
What if you fell in love with someone you never saw, never touched, and only heard through a crack in a brick wall? That is Mathilukal . Mathilukal Novel.pdf
👉 Do you think their love would have survived if they had actually met face to face, or was the wall essential to their connection? Short Caption for Instagram/Facebook (280 chars): He saw only a stone wall. She saw only the sky. Together, they built a universe. 🌹🧱 That is Mathilukal
The novel follows a political prisoner (the narrator, widely accepted as Basheer himself) confined to a prison yard surrounded by a massive stone wall. He befriends a "Youngster" and spends his days waiting for the prison gates to open so he can see the foliage outside. She saw only the sky
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Reading Vaikom Muhammad Basheer’s Mathilukal is a masterclass in longing. No faces. No touch. Just voices through a crack. The ending will haunt you forever.
But the heart of the story is her . On the other side of the exercise yard wall lives a woman—a prisoner simply known as . They cannot see each other. They only hear each other’s voices. Over time, their conversations through the "Window of the Wall" blossom into a raw, innocent, and profound love.