The Shelf / The quiet grief of becoming ordinary
19 June 2026, 00:00 AM
The Shelf
What to read / What we’re reading this week
14 May 2026, 00:00 AM
What to read
Book Review: Nonfiction / Fara Dabhoiwala’s history misses the one thing that truly matters
1 May 2026, 00:00 AM
Non-fiction review
Reflection / Harper Lee at 100: An enduring echo of justice
28 April 2026, 20:10 PM
Literature
Tribute / Humayun Azad and the courage to dissent
24 April 2026, 00:00 AM
Books & Literature
Interview / Writing what silence carries: Mohua Chinappa on memory, pain, and inheritance
24 April 2026, 00:00 AM
Features
Not just child’s play: Bengal’s rhymes as cultural memory
13 April 2026, 20:12 PM
Culture
Book Review: Nonfiction / Love, wounds, and the making of ‘Hemingway’s Women’
10 April 2026, 00:00 AM
Books & Literature
An Ekushey Book Fair breaking with tradition
21 September 2025, 13:05 PM
Books & Literature
BOOK REVIEW: FICTION / An outlandish jumble of cults, cannibalism, and colonial violence
19 March 2025, 18:00 PM
Books
3 April 2009, 18:00 PM
3 April 2009, 18:00 PM
3 April 2009, 18:00 PM
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
A martyr's tale, the story of tea and beating cancer
Selina Parveen remains for this country a reminder of the immense tragedy we went through in 1971 and especially in the days immediately prior to the liberation of Bangladesh. She was one of the many intellectuals picked up by the goon squads set up by the Pakistan occupation army --- Razakars, Al-Badr, Al-Shams --- in the three days preceding the surrender of 93,000 Pakistani soldiers on 16 December. Not one of those hapless Bengalis came back to tell the tale of torture, of the inhumanity that the Pakistanis and their local Bengali collaborators perpetrated on them
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM