Sachchidananda Vatsyayyan ‘Ajneya’

Reading Islands in the Stream in translation almost thirty years after it was originally published in Hindi, it is difficult to visualize how it could have stirred up such controversy or earned so much disapproval.


Reviewed by: Purabi Banerjee
Jamila Verghese

Newly-married women being tor­tured to death for the sake of dowry has become such a common event these days that it has almost ceased to shock. And here, in the routine appearance of small in.


Reviewed by: Anamika
Bimal Prasad

Nobody may dispute that Jayaprakash Narayan, popularly called JP, has been an important factor in Indian polity for about half a century. Starting as a Marxist (while a student in the United States of America!), he became a votary of non-violence under Gandhi’s influence and took part in the various satyagraha movements launched by the Mahatma for the country’s freedom.


Reviewed by: K.N. Sud
Shiv K. Kumar

Shiv K. Kumar made his name in the Indian literary world as a poet. He is also a highly successful member of academe as can be seen from the impres­sive string of appointments listed in the biographical note on the back jacket of his collection of short stories.


Reviewed by: Anita Desai
Amrit Wilson

This book won considerable acclaim when it was first published (by Virago) in 1978 for its exposure of the terrible condition of Asian Women workers in Britain. This book is more a political document than a sociological monograph—while it is based on a series of inter­views with Asian Women it is not so much a survey of conditions as demons­tration of their nascent political unity.


Reviewed by: Ranjana Sen Gupta
Bimal Prasad

Nobody may dispute that Jayaprakash Narayan, popularly called JP, has been an important factor in Indian polity for about half a century. Starting as a Marxist (while a student in the United States of America!), he became a votary of non-violence under Gandhi’s influence and took part in the various satyagraha movements launched by the Mahatma for the country’s freedom.


Reviewed by: K.N. Sud
R.E. Frykenberg

The collection of papers under review was first published in 1969, five years after they first felt the heat of discussion at a seminar, at the University of Wisconsin. The continuing demand for them and the response aroused by them are the reasons offered by the editor for the second edi­tion.


Reviewed by: Arup R. Banerji
S.C. Banerji

Crime and Sex in Ancient India deals with the crimes and sexual aberrations prevalent in ancient India and the punish­ments meted out. The title is rather a misnomer as the volume does not relate crime and sex to each other even though one can gather when sex became criminal to our ancients.


Reviewed by: Sreekumar
R.J. Moore

In his latest book, R.J. Moore traces the complicated course of the war-time efforts of Stafford Cripps to bring the Indian leaders into the Government and thereby behind the war effort.


Reviewed by: Bipan Chandra
Piers Blaikie

Thanks to the spread of science and the mass media, Nepal—alas—has lost its old-world charm. It has ceased to be a land of mystery with its gods and goddes­ses, its pagoda-shaped temples and snow­-clad mountains.


Reviewed by: Anirudha Gupta
Asgar Ali Engineer

Although complete in itself, the book under review has to be read in con­tinuation of the author’s work published earlier this year, The Origin and Develop­ment of Islam (Orient Longman; 1980; pp. 247; Rs. 65). It appears that the two books were originally conceived as one.


Reviewed by: Girish Mathur
Indradeep Sinha

One fact about the book is that it is a revised version of the general secretary’s report to the 22nd national conference of the All-India Kisan Sabha (AIKS) held at Vijayawada in June last year.


Reviewed by: Mukesh Vatsyayana
Atreyi Majumdar

This is a well-researched and thought­-provoking analysis of the ‘informal sec­tor’ in urban Delhi: a segment of urban economy—which so far has attracted only the ‘cursory attention of demogra­phers and social scientists’.


Reviewed by: Joshomoyee Devi
Herman Kahn

THIS is a book about the immediate past and the distant future of mankind. It looks at the recent development ex­perience of the world, particularly Taiwan and South Korea, and goes on to make predictions and give advice. But that is not all, for this is a book of disconcert­ing diversity.


Reviewed by: Kaushik Basu