Beggar’s Bedlam

Author:   Nabarun Bhattacharya ,  Rijula Das
Publisher:   Seagull Books London Ltd
ISBN:  

9781803093789


Pages:   184
Publication Date:   04 October 2024
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained


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Beggar’s Bedlam


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Overview

A hilarious and absurdist take on the political landscape of West Bengal, India. Beggar's Bedlam is a surreal novel that unleashes the chaos of the carnival on the familiar. Part literary descendent of Bulgakov's The Master and Margarita and part a reconstruction of lost Bengali history, Nabarun Bhattacharya's masterpiece is a jubilant, fizzing wire of subaltern anarchy and insurrection. Marshall Bhodi Sarkar and his lieutenant Sarkhel surreptitiously dig on the banks of the Ganges River looking for crude oil reserves. Instead, they unearth curved daggers, rusty broadswords, and a Portuguese cannon. Bhodi is an occasional military man and the lead sorcerer of the secret black-magic sect named Choktar. He joins forces with the flying Flaperoos—men with a predilection for alcohol and petty vandalism—to declare outright war against the Marxist–Leninist West Bengal government. In a bloodless revolution that is fascinating in its utter implausibility, a motley crew of yet more implausible characters come together in a magic-realist fictional remapping of Calcutta.

Full Product Details

Author:   Nabarun Bhattacharya ,  Rijula Das
Publisher:   Seagull Books London Ltd
Imprint:   Seagull Books London Ltd
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9781803093789


ISBN 10:   1803093781
Pages:   184
Publication Date:   04 October 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Forthcoming
Availability:   Awaiting stock   Availability explained

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Reviews

""This uproarious novel from Bhattacharya exemplifies the author’s penchant for freewheeling magical realism and rollicking revolutionary narratives. . . . Bhattacharya smoothly shifts between high and low registers, zagging from erudite references to Kolkata’s political history and its poets to scatological barbs, and he makes every sentence fizz with the spirit of insurrection. It’s an absolute blast."" * Publishers Weekly * “A remarkable resurrection, one that erupts full-blooded, alive with laughter, stink and rage.” -- Praise for “Harbart” * The Washington Post * “Swift and strange, Harbart tells the story of its titular character, an orphan whose life is characterized by loss and longing: a sweeping view of the richness and the turmoil of Bengali culture, literature, and politics in the twentieth century.” -- Praise for “Harbart” * The New Yorker * “Nimble and vivid, Bhattacharya’s slippery narrative slithers forward and sideways through time: an acute, idiosyncratic reading experience.” -- Praise for “Harbart” * Publishers Weekly * “Each story teeters on the edge of magical realism and surrealism, and the endings leave the reader aroused as if by a peculiar dream. The characters are both charmingly familiar and completely unbelievable: Bhattacharya stretches our imagination to the point of credulity. Noises, stenches, and difficult sights intermingle to create a book that truly lives and breathes. It is a challenge, but a worthwhile one.” -- Praise for “Hawa Hawa and Other Stories” * Litro Magazine * “Hawa Hawa provides both a window looking back to the past as well as illuminating our present. Bhattacharya’s satire navigates the gaps of time and space to speak to our present time with wisdom. While these stories are rooted in the past, they nevertheless successfully critique modernity.” -- Praise for “Hawa Hawa and Other Stories” * Chicago Review of Books *


"""A remarkable resurrection, one that erupts full-blooded, alive with laughter, stink and rage.""--Praise for ""Harbart"" ""The Washington Post"" ""Each story teeters on the edge of magical realism and surrealism, and the endings leave the reader aroused as if by a peculiar dream. The characters are both charmingly familiar and completely unbelievable: Bhattacharya stretches our imagination to the point of credulity. Noises, stenches, and difficult sights intermingle to create a book that truly lives and breathes. It is a challenge, but a worthwhile one.""--Praise for ""Hawa Hawa and Other Stories"" ""Litro Magazine"" ""Nimble and vivid, Bhattacharya's slippery narrative slithers forward and sideways through time: an acute, idiosyncratic reading experience.""--Praise for ""Harbart"" ""Publishers Weekly"" ""Swift and strange, Harbart tells the story of its titular character, an orphan whose life is characterized by loss and longing: a sweeping view of the richness and the turmoil of Bengali culture, literature, and politics in the twentieth century.""--Praise for ""Harbart"" ""The New Yorker"" ""Hawa Hawa provides both a window looking back to the past as well as illuminating our present. Bhattacharya's satire navigates the gaps of time and space to speak to our present time with wisdom. While these stories are rooted in the past, they nevertheless successfully critique modernity.""--Praise for ""Hawa Hawa and Other Stories"" ""Chicago Review of Books"""


Author Information

Nabarun Bhattacharya (1948–2014) was a prominent Bengali writer who enjoyed cult following in his lifetime and beyond. A journalist from 1973 to 1991 at a foreign news agency, he gave up that career to become a full-time writer. Novelist and short-story writer, he was also a prolific poet. Rijula Das is a novelist and translator. Her work has been translated into French, Russian and German.

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