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Backflap: Maa

Anurupa Devi’s ‘Maa’ is a period piece on the private world of Bengali women as viewed through the unique lens of a writer who belonged to and knew that society intimately.
Maa by Anurupa Devi. Translated by Sanjukta Banerji Bhattacharya. Rupa. Pages 308. Rs 395
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Maa

by Anurupa Devi. Translated by Sanjukta Banerji Bhattacharya.

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Rupa. Pages 308. Rs 395

Anurupa Devi’s ‘Maa’ is a period piece on the private world of Bengali women as viewed through the unique lens of a writer who belonged to and knew that society intimately. This is a story of human emotions as they play out in the inner sanctum of the home. It revolves around four characters in a turn-of-the-19th-century setting in the aftermath of the social churning caused by the Bengal Renaissance. The book has been translated by her granddaughter.

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The New Delhi Book Club

by Radhika Swarup.

Westland.

Pages 160. Rs 499

An elderly woman falls down in her home; a market trader battles against being housebound until his cousin is felled by the virus; a young boy falls in love with a girl on the rooftop across; a migrant labourer sets off on foot for his village as work dries up — these and other stories bring back memories of the pandemic. Through interconnected stories, banker-turned-writer Radhika Swarup tries to paint a vivid portrait of a community and find hope and joy even in the most trying of times.

Murder in the City

by Mayabhushan Nagvenkar.

Rupa.

Pages 181. Rs 295

Why did a former sex worker-turned-serial killer confess to her crimes? Was the university gold medallist killed by right-wing fanatics? Who did Swami Shraddhananda hire to make a custom coffin for his wife? Former journalist Mayabhushan Nagvenkar launches a fresh exploration of some of the most puzzling metropolitan murders in India.

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