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The Granta book of India

Front Cover
Ian Jack
5 Reviews
Granta, 2004 - History - 287 pages
The Granta Book of India brings together evocative, personal and informative writings on modern India, drawn from the pages of the world's leading literary magazine. Here are eighteen contemporary voices sketching one of the world’s most dynamic places in fiction, reportage and memoir.

Contributors include Suketu Mehta, on Mumbai, a city “with an identity crisis;” Chitrita Banerji, on “What Bengali Widows Cannot Eat”; Pankaj Mishra, on the making of jihadis in Pakistan and Afghanistan; and Rory Stewart, among the dervishes of Pakistan. Ramachandra Guha and Amit Chaudhuri remember cowboys and Indians and the dignity of American labor; Urvashi Butalia traces a family member through the political geography of India's Partition. Hanif Kureishi describes fundamentalist forces in Pakistani politics. And Nirad Chaudhuri writes on his 100th birthday. The collection includes a poem by Salman Rushdie about the fatwa, and fiction by R.K. Narayan, Amit Chaudhuri, and Nell Freudenberger.

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Review: The Granta Book of India

User Review - Goodreads

Indian writers are just amazing! My favorite is the first story written by Urvashi Butalia, Blood. Beautifully written, profound and strong.

Review: The Granta Book of India

User Review  - Elizabeth - Goodreads

fascintating the way Jack focuses on the ascendant role of US culture and the diminishing role of British in India through his choices and intro. Also interesting is his conception of "India" as the whole subcontinent. This is a gem of an anthology. Read full review

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Contents

Introduction
7
Erotic Politicians and Mullahs Hanif Kureishi
37
What Bengali Widows Cannot Eat Chitrita Banerji
123
Copyright

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About the author (2004)

Ian is an award-winning British Journalist

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