Michael Mack

Upon opening this book, the first thing that will no doubt strike the reader is the ambitious aims. It sets itself the not inconsiderable project of defining a ‘new literary theory’ which combines ethics with aesthetics, and represents a break with ‘the traditional approach (to literature) from Aristotle…


Reviewed by: Michael Walsh
Nilanjan Bandopadhyay

This is an interesting and pioneering addition to the corpus of literature which exists on the family history of the Tagores. Its relevance lies in treating a theme which may be considered taboo to many Bengalis, that of the life of Rathindranath, the only surviving son of Rabindranath, and Rathindranath’s extra-marital friendship…


Reviewed by: Sayantani Jafa
Fakrul Alam

In the year commemorating Rabindranath Tagore’s 150th birth anniversary, the highest gain has been in taking ‘Gurudev’ be-yond Bengal. The attractive and erudite volu-me, The Essential Tagore, edited by eminent scholars, Radha Chakravarty from India and Fakrul Alam from Bangladesh immediately makes…


Reviewed by: Malashri Lal
Shouri Daniels

Feelings and emotions, however trite, can never be classed as meaningless, but one’s way of portraying them can often fall short of an aesthetically acceptable standard. The Salt Doll is erotica without style. It is peopled with characters whose actions are largely conditioned by their own private compulsions…


Reviewed by: Aruna Naqvi
Saros Cowasjee

Mulk Raj Anand’s first novel Un­touchable was published in 1935. Anand, then a Bloomsbury intellectual, had writ­ten the first draft over a long weekend in 1930: ‘the book poured out like hot lava from the volcano of my crazed imagina­tion’. He revised the book after a short stay with Gandhiji…


Reviewed by: J.P. Das
Nabaneeta Dev Sen

This is the first novel of a writer who has so far been well known to Bengali readers as a poet. But her novel is not poetic in the usual sense of the term.In a style that is cerebral as well as graceful, Nabaneeta Deb Sen writes of a situation uneasily familiar…


Reviewed by: Meenakshi Mukherjee