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English, August: An Indian Story

by Upamanyu Chatterjee

English, August: An Indian Story Cover

ISBN13: 9781590171790
ISBN10: 1590171799
Condition: Standard
All Product Details

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Awards

The Rooster 2007 Morning News Tournament of Books Nominee

Synopses & Reviews

Publisher Comments:

Agastya Sen, the hero of English, August, is a child of the Indian elite. His father is the governor of Bengal. His friends go to Yale and Harvard. He himself has secured a position in the most prestigious and exclusive of Indian government agencies, the IAS.

Agastya's first assignment is to the town of Madna, buried deep in the provinces. There he meets a range of eccentrics worthy of a novel by Evelyn Waugh.

Agastya himself smokes a lot of pot and drinks a lot of beer, finds ingenious excuses to shirk work, loses himself in sexual fantasies about his boss's wife, and makes caustic asides to coworkers and friends. And yet he is as impatient with his own restlessness as he is with anything else.

Agastya's effort to figure out a place in the world is faltering and fraught with comic missteps. Chatterjee's novel, an Indian Catcher in the Rye with a wild humor and lyricism that are all its own, is at once spiritual quest and a comic revue. It offers a glimpse an Indian reality that proves no less compelling than the magic realism of Salman Rushdie and Arundhati Roy.

Review:

"There are two favorite themes in comic fiction, each the obverse of the other: The good-hearted innocent or Noble Savage who unexpectedly finds himself in the dazzling big city and the urban sophisticate somehow trapped among provincial hicks. On the one hand, 'Candide,' on the other, 'Cold Comfort Farm.' In both cases, the humor arises from incongruity and dislocation, as if a Martian were observing... Washington Post Book Review (read the entire Washington Post review)

Review:

"[Chatterjee's] book displays a world rarely seen in modern Indian writing, revealing a detailed knowledge of the heartland that can result only from personal experience....[A] classic." New York Times

Review:

"It is hard to believe that it has taken this book so long to reach American readers, but once they finish it, they will agree it was well worth the wait. A contribution not just to Indian literature but to world literature." Library Journal

Synopsis:

Published for the first time in the United States, a satirical look at Indian society by an internationally acclaimed writer.

About the Author

Born in India, Upamanyu Chatterjee attended St. Stephen's College in Delhi. He joined the Indian Administrative Service in 1983, later moving to the United Kingdom to serve as the Writer in Residence at the University of Kent. A writer of short stories and novels, he was appointed Director of Languages in the Ministry of Human Resource Development for the Indian government.

Product Details

ISBN:
9781590171790
Subtitle:
An Indian Story
Author:
Chatterjee, Upamanyu
Introduction:
Sharma, Akhil
Publisher:
New York Review of Books
Subject:
Literary
Subject:
City and town life
Subject:
Young men
Subject:
Humorous fiction
Publication Date:
April 2006
Binding:
Paperback
Language:
English
Pages:
336
Dimensions:
7.86x5.62x.90 in. .76 lbs.

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