Bleak house - Financial Express
Posted by admin / Under Upamanyu Chatterjee
Bleak house Financial Express : It's difficult to read an Upamanyu Chatterjee book nowadays without cringing, so harsh is his gaze, so ruthless his dissection of the middle class or the ... |
Published on Sunday 7th of March 2010 09:35:14 AM
Road, Movie - Times of India
Posted by admin / Under Upamanyu Chatterjee
Road, Movie Times of India If the earlier film, based on Upamanyu Chatterjee's riveting debut novel, viewed the backwaters of a slumbering, lumbering, giant-like India through the ... |
Published on Sunday 7th of March 2010 09:35:14 AM
'I don't look at the ugly side of life' - Indian Express
Posted by admin / Under Upamanyu Chatterjee
![]() Indian Express | 'I don't look at the ugly side of life' Indian Express Way to Go, Upamanyu Chatterjee's new and fifth novel, takes us back to the disaffected characters of his second book, The Last Burden. ... |
Published on Sunday 7th of March 2010 09:35:14 AM
Vanishing Act - Times of India
Posted by admin / Under Upamanyu Chatterjee
Vanishing Act Times of India It has rather to do with the fact that this verbose, clumsy novel has been written by Upamanyu Chatterjee who, two decades ago, yanked Indian English ... |
Published on Sunday 7th of March 2010 09:35:14 AM
Jamun, Burfi and the bitter taste of satire - Daily News & Analysis
Posted by admin / Under Upamanyu Chatterjee
Jamun, Burfi and the bitter taste of satire Daily News & Analysis That is at the core of Upamanyu Chatterjee's new novel, Way To Go, which re-introduces us to some of the characters from his The Last Burden. ... Way to Go: Tryst with death |
Published on Sunday 7th of March 2010 09:35:14 AM
The Skull Beneath the Skin - Indian Express
Posted by admin / Under Upamanyu Chatterjee
The Skull Beneath the Skin Indian Express These are the headlong sentences of Upamanyu Chatterjee's new novel Way to Go. They are typical of the indiscriminate, often comical piling of description ... |
Published on Sunday 7th of March 2010 09:35:14 AM
Indian, Pakistani writers love 'their own English' - Times of India
Posted by admin / Under Upamanyu Chatterjee
Indian, Pakistani writers love 'their own English' Times of India A look at some of the big names of the Indian novel such as Vikram Seth, Amitav Ghosh or Upamanyu Chatterjee reveals that they perceive the India-Pakistan ... |
Published on Sunday 7th of March 2010 09:35:14 AM
"Everybody pulls for David, nobody roots for Goliath."
This Day In History
Daniel Webster: orator delivered his Seventh of March speech defending the Compromise of 1850 (1850)







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