Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Sunday, April 04, 2004
Literary Review
Published on Sundays
News Update

Features
Magazine
Literary Review
Life
Metro Plus
Open Page
Education Plus
Book Review
Business
SciTech
Entertainment
Young World
Property Plus
Quest
Folio

Group Sites
The Hindu
Business Line
The Sportstar
Frontline

The Hindu eBooks

Home

Beyond Book Slam@Cherry Jam
U.K.-based PATRICK NEATE'S staccato evocation of a writer's life rings out at Spinn, Bangalore's swankest nightspot, on March 19, taking the Friday night goodtime crowd by surprise. What's a spoken word artist doing in their ...
Essay

A red-haired girl
THE narrator for much of the Trezza Azzopardi's first novel, The Hiding Place (2000), which was shortlisted for the Booker Prize, was a young child. The narrator of Remember Me is a mentally handicapped woman of 72 who reviews her ...

Interview

IN CONVERSATION
'Reading is a commitment'
If his books are prolific and profound, his interviews are invariably monosyllabic. Author M.G. VASSANJI, now based in Canada, would rather be known for what he pens. Most of his writing is set in parts of Africa, where he moved to a s a child. In India recently after the publication of his latest novel, The In-Between Life of Vikram Lall, his sixth book to date, Vassanji spent some time with SUCHITRA BEHAL talking about his work and his views on the w orld of publishing. Excerpts:

People

VOICE FROM THE PAST
A poet's perceptions
Though NOORUL HASAN had never met NISSIM EZEKIEL, in the mid-1990s he thought he had some questions about the burgeoning tribe of "Indo-English" poets, the interface between English and the "vernacular" literatures ...


PROFILE
Laughter born of tears
Noted Malayalam writer VKN, passed away recently. THACHOM POYIL RAJEEVAN recalls the life and times of the writer known for his `humour'.

Columns

CLASSICS REVISITED
Confessions of a sinner
"O God, give me chastity and continence but not just yet. For I was afraid you would answer my prayer at once and cure me too soon of the disease of lust, which I wanted satisfied, not quelled... "Saint Augustine: ...
THE VIEW FROM KING STREET
The Crystal Palace
CHRISTOPHER HURST admits to sharing a not uncommon obsession — with one remarkable building that burnt to the ground nearly 70 years ago.
DIFFERENT REGISTERS
A joyful find
WOMEN'S history has to be put together with bits and pieces gathered from many different sources. It could be a lullaby, sung by a woman in the fields while transplanting or it could be a short diary entry a woman made while in jail. It could be ...
First Impressions
ALEXANDER McCALL SMITH is known for his great series entitled The No. 1 Ladies Detective Agency. Smith through a set of short stories delivers an unusual insight into Africa, its unique culture and the incredible workings of people in that ...
WORDSPEAK
Cricket spin-offs
WHEN I was a young boy, I once threw a stone at a dark, rich looking object that hung from a tree limb and that was buzzing with activity. What happened next was very similar to writing the last month's "On the Bollywood Beat". Swarms of readers ...
ENDPAPER
Incomparably compassionate
THE death of Chaim Potok — the much-loved author of The Chosen, My Name Is Asher Lev and The Book of Lights — a few years ago went sadly unmentioned in the Indian press. There were no obituaries or articles on ...

Book Review

EYEWITNESS
In high places
Madam Secretary is more than the traditional memoirs ... Albright weaves the personal into the details about policy-making at the highest levels in Washington.
Too much grief
A NOVEL of remorse, sorrow and loneliness. It celebrates despair. Nothing wrong. But it has a benumbing effect. The undercurrent of pathos runs right through the book, without a moment of respite, so to say. In many ways, Afterwards ...
ESSAYS
Of Tagore and more
`The book is excellently produced and is extremely useful to literature students, especially those who specialise in Tagore or Translation Studies.'
AESTHETICS
Battling with beauty
`Saundarya raises difficult questions which invite reasonably intense discussions. For the taking are 31 essays by scholars, historians, artists, curators, critics, and self-professed aesthetes.'
GENDER STUDIES
Protest and pleasure
`Some of these essays celebrate the ways in which certain writers look forward with creativity and hope, not just back in anger.'
LIFESTYLE
Colours of modernity
`Its canvas is contemporary India — painted in the warm colours of self-conscious womanhood against the textured backdrop of popular culture and democracy in the Indian nation.'
HISTORY
The fabric of our lives
`Ultimately, despite the hard work, Dalal's book remains the shadow of a brilliant idea.'
POETRY
Hard-won humanity
`Different Faces reminds us yet again that the intensely particular frequently has more charge and resonance than ponderous abstraction and sweeping generality.'
From the blurb...
The Bus Stopped speaks of `lives and times lived, exemplifying the often unrealised necessity of journeying and discovery... It ... traverses the difficult terrain of journeys and homes, and Khair signposts the longing and belonging ...
FICTION
Same old obsessions
`I have nothing at all against popular fiction; on the contrary. But I do have something against popular fiction which masquerades as something else.'

Focus

IN THE NEWS
Oblique vision
Edwin Morgan was recently appointed the poet laureate of Scotland. In this portrait of the poet, RENUKA RAJARATNAM says that it offers new and exciting possibilities of aesthetic transformations in poetry.
LANGUAGE
Changing concepts of style
S. JAGADISAN and M.S. NAGARAJAN illuminate us with a survey of changing trends in the use of language over the last 400 years.
SHORT STORY
The tomb
I WAS then about four. I can still recall that gelid winter morning, with the cold wind whistling around my ears. Bundled up in heavy woollens, I walked behind mother, down the zigzag gravel path of our farmhouse. She stopped near a tomb that ...
The Hindu eBooks


News: Front Page | National | Tamil Nadu | Andhra Pradesh | Karnataka | Kerala | New Delhi | Other States | International | Opinion | Business | Sport | Miscellaneous | Index | Features: Magazine | Literary Review | Life | Metro Plus | Open Page | Education Plus | Book Review | Business | SciTech | Entertainment | Young World | Property Plus | Quest | Folio |

The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | Business Line | The Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | Home |

Comments to : thehindu@vsnl.com   Copyright © 2004, The Hindu
Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu