- English
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About This Book
Bhaskar Chakrabarti's poetry is synonymous with the romantic melancholia inherent to Calcutta. His trenchant poetic voice was one of the most significant to emerge in the 1960s and '70sâperhaps the most prolific period of modern Bengali poetry. Spanning the rise of militant leftism, the spread of crippling poverty across India, the war in Bangladesh, the influx of millions of refugees, the dark, dictatorial days of Indira Gandhi's reign, and the disillusionment of communist rule in Bengal, Chakrabarti's poems plumb the depths of urban angst, expressing the spirit of sadness and alienation in delicate metaphors wrapped in deceptively lucid language.In this first-ever comprehensive translation of Chakrabarti's work, award-winning translator Arunava Sinha masterfully articulates that clarity of vision, retaining the unique cadence and idioms of the Bengali language. Presenting verses and prose poems from all of Chakrabarti's lifeâfrom his first volume, When Will Winter Come, published in 1971, to his last, The Language of Giraffes, published just before his death in 2005, and collecting several unpublished works as wellâ Things That Happen and Other Poems introduces the world to a brilliant and universal poetic voice of urban life.
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Table of contents
- Poetry on Poetry
- When Will Winter Come, Suparna?
- Come, Good News, Come
- On the Streets Once More
- With the Lord
- The Sky Will Be Partly Cloudy
- Rehearsals for Dreaming
- You Are My Sleep
- The Blue Planet
- How Are You, Humans?
- The Language of Giraffes
- Unpublished and Uncollected Poems