By Tricitynews
Chandigarh 04th
March:- Shambhabi Imprint today at Oxford Bookstore Kolkata launched the book The Mark, authored by Bitan
Chakraborty, who is best known as the founder of Hawakal
Publishers. He is also an acclaimed story writer, translator, and editor of
the Bengali print journal, Atibhuj. The book was formally
released and discussed by Sharmila
Ray, Sudeep Sen & Indrajit Bose. The occasion marked the
presence of acclaimed poet Kiriti
Sengupta, who is also an editor, translator, and publisher from
Calcutta, Utpal Chakraborty,
who is a teacher of English literature, translator and bilingual poet.
The afternoon culminated with
conversations, lively discussions on literary work and insightful journey of
authors, publishers and translators in the literary sector and the audience
witnessed Hawakal launch its first imprint, CLASSIX,
through the release of Sudeep
Sen: Interviews which
is a collection of selected conversations and interviews of Sudeep Sen, widely recognized as
a major new generation voice in world literature and one of "the finest
younger English-language poets in the international literary
scene." Jhilam Chattaraj,
eminent academic, poet, and literary interviewer, was in conversation with
Sudeep Sen for the event.
The book 'The Mark' is a collection of seven short stories by Bitan Chakraborty and translated from their original
Bengali by Utpal Chakraborty.
The collection enables readers to identify the often-ignored signs of
day-to-day living. It also allows them to revisit memories, resulting in the
revival of a few existential queries, buried in our hearts for years.
The story begins and ends on the
same note, with the same trouble. Yet the full picture does not emerge until we
endure the story with the characters. We become participants or observers of
the action as we pick through its details. Bitan Chakraborty is not reacting against postmodern
philosophy—instead, he is revealing a visionary approach to solving the impasse
of the narrator by letting the story tell itself as well as inviting
the reader's surprise. The stories also have a uniquely crafted style. They
create microcosms within microcosms—as if each twist runs parallel to the
opening—like planets revolving around the sun by the law of gravity.
Sudeep
Sen: Interviews contains
a generous 350-page selection of the best conversations and interviews with the
writer on his life and work, culled from over 30 years or so, which have
appeared in newspapers, magazines, and journals around the world. Leading
international and national scholars, critics, writers, and journalists have
spoken to Sen in detail about the intricacies of his literary craft, about his
preoccupations, interests, and obsessions. Taken together, the book reveals the
important interior spaces and his creative and intellectual landscape of
"one of India's foremost poets." Sudeep Sen is widely recognized as a
major new generation voice in world literature. "Writing poetry over so
many decades in a world that values lucre over passion, fiction over poetry is
an uphill task. To stick to a genre that does not easily find ready readership
or publishers, for the most part, takes a mad kind of "courage" and a
dogged "love [for] the art." It is this that has allowed me to pursue
poetry and all things related to poetry — the writing of it, translating,
editing, publishing and supporting young writers. At the core of it, poetry
gives me the greatest joy in my life," writes Sen in the preface to the
collection.
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