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Fire of Bengal

Fire of Bengal

Author: Rozsa Hajnoczy Editor: William Radice Translator: David Grant
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  • বই উপহারঃ বই উপহারঃ
    বিস্তারিত
  • বই উপহার.. বই উপহার..
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  • কম্বো অফারঃ কম্বো অফারঃ
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  • কম্বো অফার.. কম্বো অফার..
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  • ফ্রি ডেলিভারিঃ ফ্রি ডেলিভারিঃ
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Publisher The University Press Limited
ISBN984 05 1187 4
Pages590
Reading Level General Reading
Language English
PrintedBangladesh
Format Hardbound
Category Novel ফিকশন
Return Policy

7 Days Happy Return

Fire of Bengal plunges us into the midst of life in Rabindranath Tagore’s Santiniketan during the late 1920s. Rozsa Hajnoczy, wife of a Hungarian professor, kept a journal of her impression during their three years stay at the ashram. After her death in 1942 this was published in Budapest and became one of the classics of modern Hungarian literature. For through Rozsa’s clear yet compassionate eye we witness Tagore’s ‘heaven of peace’ beg torn apart by the tensions that were shaking the foundations of the Raj, by subversion and riot among students and staff, and by the ill-fated East-West marriage between Atany Ray, a professor of English, and his European wife, Himjhuri. For these dramatic events Rozsa Hajnoczy provides a kaleidoscopic background of temples, places, harems and hovels, of mountain, jungle and plain, of princes and beggars, of holy men and revolutionaries. All this, and the portraits of Tagore, Gandhi, and the cosmopolitan characters on the campus, surely contains much that will be a revelation even to those who remember those times.

Authors:
Rozsa Hajnoczy

Rozsa Hajnoczy, wife of a Hungarian professor, kept a journal of her impression during their three years stay at the Santiniketan ashram in Bengal. After her death in 1942 this was published in Budapest and became one of the classics of modern Hungarian literature.

Editors:
William Radice

 

William Radice has pursued a double career as a poet, and as a scholar and translator of Bengali. He read English at Oxford, where he won the Newdigte Prize for poetry in 1971 and wrote his first book, Eight Sections (Secker & Warburg, 1974). He went on to do a Diploma in Bengali at the School of Orient & African Studies (SOAS), London. After five years working as a psychiatric nurse and a schoolmaster, he returned to oxford to write a D.Phil. thesis on Michael Madhusudun Datta. In 1990 he became Lecturer in Bengali at SOAS. His publications include two more books of verse (Strivings, 1980 and Louring Skies, 1985, both published by Anvil Press), Selected Poems, and Selected Short Stories of Tagore (tr.) and The Translator’s Art: Essays in Honour of Betty Radice (ed.) for Penguin Books, The Stupid Tiger and Other Tales (tr. From the Bengali of Upendrakishore Raychaudhuri) for Andre Deutsch and Rupa, and Teach Yourself Bengali for Hodder & Sroughton. In 1986 he was awarded the Ananda Puraskar in Calcutta, and in 1987 the Michael Puraskar in Dhaka. He has lectured widely in India and Bangladesh, and is also a regular visitor to Germany. Married, with two daughters, he now divides his time between London and Northumberland.

Translators:
David Grant

David Grant was born in 1925 and educated at a Portsmouth Grammar School and University College London. During the Second World War he served with the RAF as a Japanese linguist in the SW Pacific. In 1950 he began his career as a schoolmaster which lasted until his retirement in 1990. His first publication was Waes, a historical novel (Allen & Unwin 1967). In 1960 his stage-play, Seaman Leading, was produced at the Oxford Playhouse, and in 1966 The Gamecock toured Britain with Prospect Productions. In 1968 he published his play for schools, King Cat (Longmans). He has received two Arts Council Drama Bursaries and a Literature award for his novel Esplanade. David Grant now runs a small publishing firm, Escargot Press, which in 1991 published his poem, Letter to John Keats, followed in 1992 by Letter to WH. Auden.

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