Golden Gandhi Statue From America : Early Stories

By: Misra, SubimalContributor(s): Ramasamy, V (Translator)Language: English Publication details: Haryana HarperCollins Publishers 2024Description: xiii, 179pISBN: 9789356996878 (PB)Subject(s): short fiction | General
Contents:
1. The golden Gandhi statue from America 2. Uncle Seer 3. The camel 4. The bird 5. The money tree 6. Times, bad times 7. The naked knife 8. Amber light at Park 9. Street crossing 10. The dagger 11. Fairy girl 12. Blood 13. Brothers whitty and shitty 14. Commentary '71 15. Bare bones awakened 16. Feeling distant
Summary: An unemployed young man is invited to his lover's wedding and decides to gift her a bottle of his own blood. Rumours of a great big flood or the end of days or a rebellion of refugees in Calcutta fly through the country. Haran majhi's starved widow's corpse floats down rivers and swamps and drains as the nation awaits eagerly the unveiling of the golden Gandhi statue from America. The early stories of Subimal Misra took the Bengali literary world by storm upon their publication in the late 1960s. Distinct from the conventional modes of storytelling that preceded him, Misra's pieces are more anti-stories than stories, a montage of images that flow into each other and tell a tale with greater power and urgency than narrative fiction. Every story hits hard, gripping the reader with intensity and an underlying fantastical horror that is firmly rooted in reality. V. Ramaswamy's exceptional translation brings to the fore the contemporaneity of Misra's work while retaining the verve and pungency of the original. Anti establishment and revolutionary,these stories by a writer whom many consider to be a cult figure in Bengali literature resonate with truths that are undeniable even today, forty years after they were written
Item type: BOOKS
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Current library Home library Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode
IMSc Library
IMSc Library
82-32 MIS (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Available 77840

1. The golden Gandhi statue from America
2. Uncle Seer
3. The camel
4. The bird
5. The money tree
6. Times, bad times
7. The naked knife
8. Amber light at Park
9. Street crossing
10. The dagger
11. Fairy girl
12. Blood
13. Brothers whitty and shitty
14. Commentary '71
15. Bare bones awakened
16. Feeling distant

An unemployed young man is invited to his lover's wedding and decides to gift her a bottle of his own blood. Rumours of a great big flood or the end of days or a rebellion of refugees in Calcutta fly through the country. Haran majhi's starved widow's corpse floats down rivers and swamps and drains as the nation awaits eagerly the unveiling of the golden Gandhi statue from America. The early stories of Subimal Misra took the Bengali literary world by storm upon their publication in the late 1960s. Distinct from the conventional modes of storytelling that preceded him, Misra's pieces are more anti-stories than stories, a montage of images that flow into each other and tell a tale with greater power and urgency than narrative fiction. Every story hits hard, gripping the reader with intensity and an underlying fantastical horror that is firmly rooted in reality. V. Ramaswamy's exceptional translation brings to the fore the contemporaneity of Misra's work while retaining the verve and pungency of the original. Anti establishment and revolutionary,these stories by a writer whom many consider to be a cult figure in Bengali literature resonate with truths that are undeniable even today, forty years after they were written

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.
The Institute of Mathematical Sciences, Chennai, India

Powered by Koha