ABSTRACT

For more than a generation, Indian writers in English have won praise in the West. The roll call of Indian-born writers is startling: Rushdie, Mukerjee, Mehta, Ghosh, Naipaul, Kureishi, Narayan, Mistry, among many others.
Amitava Kumar, himself an Indian writer now 'away' in America, is editing a broad anthology of work by Indian writers whose lives and literary identities have been formed by their experiences in some form of exile. Spanning writing from the 1920s to the present, Away contains work by the writers mentioned above, alongside earlier pieces by Gandhi, Nehru, and Tagore, and a wide range of writers over the last half-century.

part |55 pages

Prologue

part |78 pages

Part III

chapter |12 pages

Oxford

chapter |16 pages

Indoor Language

chapter |5 pages

Gold Emporium

chapter |4 pages

Vegetarian Summer

chapter |6 pages

The Imam and I

chapter |7 pages

Flight

part |12 pages

Epilogue