Description

‘The erudite Kannada scholar and critic D. R. Nagaraj wrote, “To read fiction is to know the fate of a society through its metaphors. But quite often literature 
consciously takes upon itself the responsibility of exploring the state and fate of this society…” This is precisely what the stories in this collection do: they 
may speak of past and present, but really it is the future—that we fear and dream of and hope for—that we want to speak and hear about. And these stories we share, most through the gift of translation, live through their metaphors; the metaphors the writers and translators hold in their hands like blessings—or timely curses…’
Githa Hariharan, from her Introduction, ‘At the Pace of a Thousand Storms’

‘Can poetry be political? … The poems in this anthology tell us without doubt or apprehension: “Yes, poetically political if not politically political.” And as we 
finish reading these poems, we realize that politics and poetry, in their real spirit, are two ways of telling the truth, and have been engaged—and continue 
to engage—in an endless conversation.’
K. Satchidanandan, from his Introduction, ‘Poetically Political’

During the seven years of its existence, from 2015 to 2022, the multilingual journal of culture Guftugu resolutely asserted India's diversity against the attempt to force fit the country into a single mould. Selected from the twenty-two published issues of Guftugu, The View from Here arms us with prose and verse that bear powerful witness to the many Indias, past and present. Twenty stunning stories and more than fifty memorable poems are, together, unflinching in their insistence on diversity, dissent and, most of all, equality. 

About the author(s)

Githa Hariharan has written novels, short fiction and essays over the last three and a half decades. Her highly acclaimed work includes the novels The Thousand Faces of Night, which won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize for Best First Book in 1993, The Ghosts of Vasu Master, When Dreams Travel, In Times of Siege, Fugitive Histories and I Have Become the Tide. She is the author of the short story collection The Art of Dying and the essay collection Almost Home, Cities and Other Places. She has edited several collections of fiction, essays and poetry, the most recent of them This Too is India: Conversations on Diversity and Dissent. For more on this Delhi-based author and her work, visit www.githahariharan.com. 

K. Satchidanandan is a pioneer of modern poetry in Malayalam, a bilingual critic, playwright, editor, fiction writer, translator and travel writer. He has been a Professor of English and of Translation Studies, editor of Indian Literature bimonthly, the executive head of the National Academy of Letters and is presently the President of the Kerala Sahitya Akademi.

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