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‘Like its structure, the book’s meticulous phrasing and seductive charm echo the allure of a self-concious city whose history is not to be found in libraries. Already a poet, musician, critic and novelist, in Calcutta Amit Chaudhuri bravely - and brilliantly - embraces new form that is, in many ways, the expression of the city itself.’
'This personal account of two years living there, 2009-2011, is written in typically elegant prose.’
‘Chaudhuri uses the 2011 election as a fulcrum to examine the multifarious history of the place.’
‘ 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. At its best it reads like Sebald or Naipaul in A Way in the World. His prose displays an ability amounting to brilliance for finding the right words to catch an emotion, a thought, a personality.’
’ Chaudhuri is an engaging host who writes fluently and accessibly about big themes. It’ s a rewarding glimpse into a deftly-sketched world.’
‘ India’ s great cities have been the subject of many outstanding travel books and now it is the turn of Calcutta. His 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.‘
‘ Beautifully written paean to the place.’
‘ Chaudhuri uses the 2011 election as a fulcrum to examine the multifarious history of the place.’
‘ Chaudhuri’ s highly personal preoccupations provide an insight into how Calcutta is attempting to adapt to globalisation. The essays add up to a warm, vivid and often humorous portrait of his birthplace.'
‘ Calcutta, a non-fiction account of the present-day city, has a leisurely, discursive feel, offering asides on the Bengal craze for Italian food and the snobberies of the city’ s fast-dwindling anglophone Indian class. Chaudhuri, a fastidious if elegant writer, nevertheless keeps the pages turning. Like VS Naipaul before him, Chaudhuri weaves his reportage with bibliographic allusions and excels at revealing the spirit of his chosen place. Wise and subtle, Chaudhuri wears his erudition lightly and weaves personal anecdote into enduring reportage.’
‘ This surprising book works for many reasons. The range of angles from which he approaches these places gives the book great depth. The historical, the haphazard, the literary and intellectual – and the personal, for this is where his parents live and his father is fading. 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.’
'Chaudhuri concentrates on the everyday and there’ s something admirable about the calm confidence of his unelectric narratives - of buying some vintage windows, of a street food vendor or a friend of the family. His India isn’ t only the exotic other we’ re still so invested in, and his truths, quietly disclosed, are highly valuable.’
'Concussed by the noise of the new and beguiled by echoes of the past, Chaudhuri maintains his novelists eye and ear for Calcutta’ s character and citizens. He combines the serendipity of the flaneur with the sensitivity of the social historian.’
'What’ s a memoir when
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Book Description Condition: New. Seller Inventory # 26134218371
Book Description Condition: New. Seller Inventory # 142064988