Works by three Indian authors are among six shortlisted for the US $ 50,000 DSC Prize for South Asian literature, a newly-instituted literary award given annually to writers on themes such as culture, politics and history of the region.
Manju Kapur's The Immigrant, Neel Mukherjee's A Life Apart and Amit Chaudhuri's The Immortals have been shortlisted for the prestigious award. The other three authors in the short-list announced at the world-famous Shakespeare Globe Theatre in London are Musharraf Ali (The Story of a Widow), H M Naqvi (Home Boy), both from Pakistan and Tania James (Atlas of Unknowns).
Raising the issue of India-born author Rohinton Mistry's novel Such a Long Journey being removed from the syllabus of the Bombay University following protests by student wing of the Shiva Sena, Nilanjana S Roy, Indian journalist and critic said that the readers must counter censorship. "There is no remedy against people who want to silence writers but to be a reader," she said, before inviting fellow jury member and London-based Pakistani author Moni Mohsin to announce the shortlist.
Amit Chaudhuri's The Immortals is set in Mumbai during the 1970s and early 1980s. It traces the history of two families, one bathed in corporate affluence and the other subsisting on its musical tradition. The Immortals is an ordered tabulation of their unremarkable existence, with the words on the page like the agglomeration of notes on a music sheet. Amit Chaudhuri is an internationally recognised Indian English author, an academic and an acclaimed Indian classical musician. He is the winner of the Commonwealth Writers Prize for Best First Book for A Strange and Sublime Address in 1991 and the 2002 winner of the Sahitya Akademi Award for A New World. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.
Manju Kapur's The Immigrant is a story about Nina. When Nina, a 30-year-old lecturer based in Delhi goes in for an arranged marriage with Ananda and relocates to Canada, she realises the changes in her life are far greater than she ever could have imagined. As certain truths about Ananda and their relationship unfold, she realises that
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