Issue 13, May-Jun 2007 

Focus: Modern Telugu Literature


Feature: Children’s Literature in India

    IN CONVERSATION...

In a free-wheeling discussion with Manu Dash, the eminent poet K Satchidanandan says, “….A poet has to believe in the truth of poetry; what his/her imagination seizes in words is truth for him/her while someone may call it a beautiful lie, as would Plato who thought poetry was twice removed from reality.”

Read this and other conversations with notable poets Mamang Dai and CL Aboobacker



    BOOK REVIEWS...
Reviewing “Arundhati Roy – Critical Perspectives,’ edited by Murari Prasad, Prof R S Sharma notes, “This compilation is critically valuable, immensely informative and up to date. [However] quite a few of the essays operate within the single parameter of postcolonialism ….”

The section also offers reviews of Rita Nath Keshari’s “The Postcolonial Encounter: India in the British Imagination” by R K Singh and Santosh Kumar’s “Helicon” by Maria Cristina Azcona.

    FICTION...

In a moving story “That Kind of a Place,” woven around lives caught in the trauma of modern-day violence, M K Chand Raj laments through his character, “…All I wish is to take my child Ansari, yes my Yadu, and escape out of Al Arif - out of this hellhole. To a place where war will never touch us … That kind of a place!”

Read other compelling stories by Prayas Abhinav, Sundara Ramaswamy and Suseela Ravi in the section.


    POEMS...
“I loved her in secret ways / And now our love is a secret whisper. / I promised her the spring, / Her tears were the only parting gifts I received.”

Read the compelling lines of Nikesh Murali in “Tonight I can write the saddest lines” as a tribute to Pablo Neruda. And many more equally compelling poems in the section.


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