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ISBN: HB: 9780857427939

Seagull Books

July 2021

96 pp.

22.8x15.2 cm

HB:
£14,99
QTY:

Categories:

Wolves

and Other Stories

Written during the final stages of the Indian Independence movement, between the gloom and angst of the interwar period and at the cusp of the beginning of modern India, Bhuwaneshwar's short stories both capture the melancholy of the time and ask what it means to be human in an indifferent and amoral world. These stories are truly an event in the history of modern Hindi literature – his work marks a complete break from the neo-romanticism and mysticism of his predecessors and contemporaries and establishes him as the definitive founder of the modern Hindi short story. His stories are populated with lonely characters from all walks of life: doctors, students, nomadic communities, acrobats, single mothers, soldiers returning from war, neglected children, and more. They are people living on the margins, introspecting their own anxieties and existence in an increasingly uncertain world set in places as far apart as hill stations, anonymous Indian villages, highways, railway compartments, and small towns in France. This new collection includes all of Bhuwaneshwar's twelve published short stories, none of which have been translated into English before now. Cinematic and peerless, these tales combine images, sketches, sounds, fragments, dialogues, and frame-narrative techniques of Indian folktales, ultimately creating a montage of modern Indian psyche not found in any other work of Hindi literature. Nearly a century old, Bhuwaneshwar's stories read like they were written in modern day, dealing with questions and anxieties that continue to haunt and reappear, much like his iconic wolves, in the twenty-first century.    

About the Author

Born in 1910 in Shahjahanpur, Uttar Pradesh, India, Bhuwaneshwar spent a childhood marked by abject poverty and neglect. He was discovered by the iconic Hindi writer Premchand for his exceptional literary talent in 1933 and was declared the future of Hindi literature in 1936 at the Progressive Writers' Association. Noted initially for his plays, he soon started writing short stories in Hindi and poetry in English as well as translating Oscar Wile and Nikolai Gogol into Hindi. He enjoyed some literary success before being treated coldly by the literary community. This period saw his descent into poverty, forcing him to spend his nights inside vacant train compartments. Though, this harsh period saw some amelioration when a few of his stories were published, Bhuwaneshwar was never to fully return. After continued financial struggles and a rejected marriage proposal, he descended into alcoholism and spent his remaining days on the streets of Allahabad in a mentally unstable state. He was last spotted in Benaras, ill, and among beggars. He died sometime in 1957.