000 02190nam a22002537a 4500
005 20251208093343.0
008 220909b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9789352876907
040 _cAL
041 _aeng
082 _223
_a820.301
_bCHUS
100 _aR Chudamani
_9248175
245 _aSolitary sprout
_b: Selected stories of R Chudamani
260 _aHyderabad
_bOrient Blackswan
_c2019
300 _axxxi,216p
_bPB
_c21x14cm
365 _2English
_a3496
_b425.00
_c
_d545.00
_e22%
_f09-08-2022
520 _aWhen was the last time you read a story without thinking about the politics of identity or gender? Although all art is admittedly implicated in politics, in recent years, the writer, the reader, the text and the world have all revolved around the rather tyrannical framework of ideology to the exclusion of much else that art can legitimately claim to offer. So when an anthology like The Solitary Sprout, written by the famous Tamil author R. Chudamani, appears, one is touched by the sheer force of simplicity that, one almost believed, did not exist any more. Each of the 20 stories in this collection is about people whose lives are enmeshed in a web of their own making. ‘From Narcissist to Artist’ is about a painter, Manikkam, who has lost his creative ability. Then one day, Valli, his sister who has a slight limp, comes back into his life for a short while and helps him unpack his locked self. The artist is set free but the reader is ensnared by the untold story of Valli. Beyond the book There’s the story of a stepmother who despite herself does the right thing by her stepson; there’s a wheel-chair bound young man who is forced to listen to the miseries of other people; there’s the autocratic man whose daughters have run away and yet his wife continues to serve him to ‘prop up’ his crumbling ego; and there’s the heart-wrenching story of the wife whose husband denies her access to her family.
650 _aIndian English Stories
_956949
650 _aIndian English LIterature
_956950
650 _aTamil Tr in English
_956956
700 _aIndra C T Tr
_956952
700 _aSriraman T Tr
_956953
942 _2ddc
_cBK
999 _c224544
_d224544