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"Magnificent . . . I would follow Miss Chitol to the ends of the earth." -Kamila Shamsie "Profoundly tender [and] vigorously alive to the currents of national change." -Megha Majumdar From the Man Asian Prize-shortlisted author Rahul Bhattacharya, a breathtaking novel about a woman forging a life for herself on the railways of twentieth-century India. In a country rapidly modernizing after independence, Animesh Chitol bends his caste title into a quirky surname, moves his family to the brand-new township of Bhombalpur Railway Workshop, and throws in his lot with an optimism-filled future. Then…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"Magnificent . . . I would follow Miss Chitol to the ends of the earth." -Kamila Shamsie "Profoundly tender [and] vigorously alive to the currents of national change." -Megha Majumdar From the Man Asian Prize-shortlisted author Rahul Bhattacharya, a breathtaking novel about a woman forging a life for herself on the railways of twentieth-century India. In a country rapidly modernizing after independence, Animesh Chitol bends his caste title into a quirky surname, moves his family to the brand-new township of Bhombalpur Railway Workshop, and throws in his lot with an optimism-filled future. Then tragedy strikes. Into the empty space left by his wife's passing grows Chitol's only daughter, the middle child, Charu. As India moves from steam to diesel locomotives, through a great strike and state repression, Charu flees to Bombay, alarmed by her narrow prospects. There she quests for the means to live on her own terms. Amidst the everyday discriminations of modern India, Charu forges her own destiny, becoming a railway woman and census enumerator who keeps her heart open-sometimes guilelessly-to her country's vast possibility. Sweeping, elegiac, and at times wonderfully comic, Railsong is one woman's coming of age and a beautifully complex love letter to the finely wrought world of the Indian railways and a country beset by religious and political upheaval.
Autorenporträt
Rahul Bhattacharya is the author of the Ondaatje Prize-winning and Man Asian Literary Prize-shortlisted The Sly Company of People Who Care. His journalism has been published by Hindustan Times, Al Jazeera, the Guardian , and the New York Times. He lives in Delhi.
Rezensionen
Rahul Bhattacharya is an extraordinary writer, and Railsong is a majestic yet profoundly tender novel. Vigorously alive to the currents of national change as well as to the tragedy, daring, humour and love experienced in one woman's days and years, Railsong bids us to observe the worth and intricacy of one person's journey