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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Amit ChaudhuriPublisher: Random House USA Inc Imprint: Vintage Books Dimensions: Width: 13.10cm , Height: 1.70cm , Length: 20.30cm Weight: 0.236kg ISBN: 9780307454669ISBN 10: 0307454665 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 14 April 2015 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviewsEngrossing and impressive. --Anita Desai, The New York Review of Books Fascinating. . . . Chaudhuri explores ideas of modernity and globalization in this essayistic appreciation. . . . [His] insider-outsider status allows him to probe the city's eccentricities with both affection and unease. -- The New Yorker [A] lovely account. . . . [Marked by] the strength of Mr. Chaudhuri's prose and the acuity of his observations. . . . [His] very personal story is a welcome contribution to the literature of the city. It also recalls another author who first set foot in Calcutta in 1962: V.S. Naipaul. -- The Wall Street Journal Equal parts memoir, literary history, sad-eyed sitcom. . . . [ Calcutta is] rich in presence and sings a beautiful tune all of its own. . . . All the richer for presenting the city as a series of unexpected memory tugs. -- The Guardian (London) Chaudhuri's writing has a strangely mesmeric quality, using the quotidian to draw the reader into the author's mental world, his own way of looking. . . . His prose displays an ability amounting to brilliance for finding the right words to catch an emotion, a thought, a personality. -- Financial Times Simply stunning. . . . Calcutta should be mandatory reading not only for those unfamiliar with the place but for those who imagine they know it well. . . . Blending reportage, meditation, history and critique, it draws a fascinating portrait. -- The Independent (London) A complex patchwork of topics, scenes and even genres. It's a crazy-quilt of a book that shows the author's ear for reproducing speech and his knack for sketching not only personalities but also smells and, especially, tastes. -- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette India's great cities have been the subject of many outstanding travel books and now it is the turn of Calcutta. [Chaudhuri's] stories are spun out of a mix of history and family memoir, but the joy here lies in his digressions, his wanderings through the city, his remembrances and conjectures. -- The Sunday Times (London) Chaudhuri approaches his chronicle of the city of his birth with a practised eye. -- London Review of Books A splendid read; an introduction to a city, or confirmation of it; a meditation on expression and on [the author's] own development as a writer. . . . Chaudhuri's prose is delicious, his humour wry. -- Australian Book Review Beguiling. . . . Chaudhuri makes [Calcutta] sound like just the place to be. -- The Spectator (London) Concussed by the noise of the new and beguiled by echoes of the past, Chaudhuri maintains his novelist's eye and ear for Calcutta's character and citizens. He combines the serendipity of the flAneur with the sensitivity of the social historian. -- The Times (London) Chaudhuri is a writer, academic and musician. He uses his consciousness of all three in his narratives. He's curious, he's edgy . . . he's incisive, reflective and sometimes poetic. -- The Tribune (India) Chaudhuri's Calcutta has a different scope and intention to Suketu Mehta's Maximum City (about Mumbai) and to William Dalrymple's City of Djinns (about Delhi), but like those books, it succeeds brilliantly in making sense of a place few of us can know. -- The Observer (England) Unique and fascinating. . . . [Chaudhuri's] masterful prose style lingers on the tiny, quotidian details and draws out their significance. -- Scottish Herald [Chaudhuri's] most personal and perambulatory book to date. . . . [ Calcutta ] is a modernist canvas that mirrors the complexity and diversity of the metropolis itself and is in turn mirrored by Chaudhuri's idiosyncratic style, blending autobiography, literary reportage, and personal essay. -- World Literature Today Engrossing and impressive. --Anita Desai, The New York Review of Books Fascinating. . . . Chaudhuri explores ideas of modernity and globalization in this essayistic appreciation. . . . [His] insider-outsider status allows him to probe the city's eccentricities with both affection and unease. -- The New Yorker [A] lovely account. . . . [Marked by] the strength of Mr. Chaudhuri's prose and the acuity of his observations. . . . [His] very personal story is a welcome contribution to the literature of the city. It also recalls another author who first set foot in Calcutta in 1962: V.S. Naipaul. -- The Wall Street Journal Equal parts memoir, literary history, sad-eyed sitcom. . . . [ Calcutta is] rich in presence and sings a beautiful tune all of its own. . . . All the richer for presenting the city as a series of unexpected memory tugs. -- The Guardian (London) Chaudhuri's writing has a strangely mesmeric quality, using the quotidian to draw the reader into the author's mental world, his own way of looking. . . . His prose displays an ability amounting to brilliance for finding the right words to catch an emotion, a thought, a personality. -- Financial Times Simply stunning. . . . Calcutta should be mandatory reading not only for those unfamiliar with the place but for those who imagine they know it well. . . . Blending reportage, meditation, history and critique, it draws a fascinating portrait. -- The Independent (London) A complex patchwork of topics, scenes and even genres. It's a crazy-quilt of a book that shows the author's ear for reproducing speech and his knack for sketching not only personalities but also smells and, especially, tastes. -- Pittsburgh Post-Gazette India's great cities have been the subject of many outstanding travel books and now it is the turn of Calcutta. [Chaudhuri's] stories are spun out of a mix of history and family memoir, but the joy here lies in his digressions, his wanderings through the city, his remembrances and conjectures. -- The Sunday Times (London) Chaudhuri approaches his chronicle of the city of his birth with a practised eye. -- London Review of Books A splendid read; an introduction to a city, or confirmation of it; a meditation on expression and on [the author's] own development as a writer. . . . Chaudhuri's prose is delicious, his humour wry. -- Australian Book Review Beguiling. . . . Chaudhuri makes [Calcutta] sound like just the place to be. -- The Spectator (London) Concussed by the noise of the new and beguiled by echoes of the past, Chaudhuri maintains his novelist's eye and ear for Calcutta's character and citizens. He combines the serendipity of the flaneur with the sensitivity of the social historian. -- The Times (London) Chaudhuri is a writer, academic and musician. He uses his consciousness of all three in his narratives. He's curious, he's edgy . . . he's incisive, reflective and sometimes poetic. -- The Tribune (India) Chaudhuri's Calcutta has a different scope and intention to Suketu Mehta's Maximum City (about Mumbai) and to William Dalrymple's City of Djinns (about Delhi), but like those books, it succeeds brilliantly in making sense of a place few of us can know. -- The Observer (England) Unique and fascinating. . . . [Chaudhuri's] masterful prose style lingers on the tiny, quotidian details and draws out their significance. -- Scottish Herald [Chaudhuri's] most personal and perambulatory book to date. . . . [ Calcutta ] is a modernist canvas that mirrors the complexity and diversity of the metropolis itself and is in turn mirrored by Chaudhuri's idiosyncratic style, blending autobiography, literary reportage, and personal essay. -- World Literature Today Author InformationAmit Chaudhuri is the author of several award-winning novels and is an internationally acclaimed musician and essayist. Freedom Song: Three Novels received the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for Fiction. His many international honors include the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize; most recently, he became the first recipient of the Infosys Prize for Humanities — Literary Studies. He is a contributor to the London Review of Books, Granta, and The Times Literary Supplement. He is currently professor of contemporary literature at the University of East Anglia and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |