Subjects

From the Delta : English Fiction from Bangladesh

Edited by Niaz Zaman, The University Press, 2005, x, 216 p, ISBN : 9840517546, $22.00 (Includes free airmail shipping)

Contents: Preface. 1. Sultana's Dream/Roquiah Sakhawat Hossein. 2. No enemy/Syed Waliullah. 3. The return/Razia Khan. 4. Mariam and the Miser/Niaz Zaman. 5. The debt/Raza Ali. 6. Penance of love/Mohammad Badrul Ahsan. 7. Grandmother's Wardrobe/Aali A. Rehman. 8. To marry or not to/Shahid Alam. 9. An Ilish story/Khademul Islam. 10. Sunset/Razia Sultana Khan. 11. Men, women and lovers/Syed Badrul Ahsan. 12. Revelation/Farhana Haque Rahman. 13. The mapmakers of spitalfields/Syed Manzurul Islam. 14. The last letter/Neeman A. Sobhan. 15. It's the heart that matters/Towheed Feroze. 16. Story of a night's journey/Shabnam Nadiya. 17. Detached belonging/Dilruba Z. Ara. 18. Tick-tock/Munize M. Khasru. 19. The wait/Rubaiyat Khan. 20. Branded/Nuzhat Amin Mannan. 21. Forty steps/Kazi Anis Ahmed. 22. The other side of the mirror/Tulip Chowdhury. 23. Wet sandals/Maithilee Mitra. 24. A small sacrifice/Farah Ghuznavi. Contributors.

"This collection of short fiction begins with "Sultana's Dream", published in 1905, and ends with "A Small Sacrifice," published in 2005, covering a hundred years. Both the stories critique prevailing injustices of a male-dominated society, with the element of class added to the latter story. Roquiah Sakhawat Hossein and Syed Waliullah wrote in both Bangla and English -- as do Razia Khan, Munize M. Khasru, Dilruba Z. Ara, Maithilee Mitra, and K. Anis Ahmed. The other writers in this volume - Mohammad Badrul Ahsan, Syed Badrul Ahsan, Shahid Alam, Raza Ali, Tulip Chowdhury, Towheed Feroze, Farah Ghuznavi, Khademul Islam, Syed Manzurul Islam, Razia Sultana Khan, Rubaiyat Khan, Nuzhat Amin Mannan, Shabnam Nadiya, Farhana Haque Rahman, Aali A. Rehman, Neeman Sobhan - write mainly in English. While many of the stories are inspired by social and political concerns, many are also inspired by the relations between men and women as husbands and wives, lovers and mistresses, fathers and daughters. Others are about aging and dying, about childbirth, about 1971 and its heroes and villains, about the pain of being an expatriate. Many of the stories have been published earlier in newspapers and magazines; some of them are awardwining stories; others are being published for the first time. Taken together, the twenty-four stories of this volume showcase English writing from this region and reveal the timeless as well as changing face of the Bengal Delta." (jacket)

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