A perennial philosophy: Amitav Ghosh’s ‘Jungle Nama’

Amitav Ghosh’s passionate engagement with the Sundarbans has brought out his best as a socially conscious fashioner of narrative in The Hungry Tide (HarperCollins, 2004) and Gun Island (John Murray, 2019); enriched his intervention in the discourse on ecology, The Great Derangement: Climate Change and the Unthinkable (Penguin, 2016); and perhaps most felicitously, has brought to light the poet hiding behind his voluminous prose.
14 July 2021, 18:00 PM

‘Think Like CEOs’: A new book collects the lauded ‘The Chief Executive Show’

Md Tajdin Hassan and Shuvashish Roy, leaders of business development at The Daily Star, have jointly compiled and released a new book, Think Like CEOs (Daily Star Books, 2021), which seeks to impart management tips from 20 eminent business leaders of the country. Conducted from September 2020 through to February of this year, the interviews with the 20 CEOs took place virtually through a Facebook Live series called “The Chief Executive Show”, broadcasted on The Daily Star.
14 July 2021, 13:14 PM

Kim Bo-Young’s ethereal new diptych

Central to Kim Bo-Young’s winning I'm Waiting for You: And Other Stories (HarperCollins, 2021; transl. Sophie Bowman & Sung Ryu) are duality, symmetry, and (dis)harmony. This new four-story collection is divided right down its middle—where the first and fourth stories are continuations of one another, while the second and third merge to form a tessellation of one overarching narrative. In its 314 pages is a constellation of imagined lives, imagined realities, that try and verily succeed in drawing the reader into its bizarre, brilliant, and frequently confounding orbit. Bo-Young has done well in structuring the two main stories of the book, though the hooking nature of the first forces a halt when one turns the page over to the contemplative and shape-shifting second.
11 July 2021, 12:34 PM

Journalist Arun Das Gupta no more

journalist and litterateur, breathed his last at his village home in Dhalghat under Patiya upazila of Chattogram yesterday, aged 86.
10 July 2021, 18:00 PM

Shaheen Chishti’s debut novel ‘The Grand Daughter Project’

Shaheen Chishti, a descendant of the revered Sufi saint Khwaja Moinuddin Chishti, and a London-based writer and women’s rights advocate, has just released his debut novel. The Grand Daughter Project (Nimble Books, 2021) touches upon a wide range of themes including gender inequality, racial oppression, war-time trauma, and female emancipation.
10 July 2021, 11:03 AM

Why Are You Sad, O River?

Many of us still remember the year 1998 when Chitra Nadir Paare (Quiet Flows the Chitra) was released in Dhaka; with Afsana Mimi’s smiling face on the big posters around Dhaka University campus, the film became the talk of the town.
9 July 2021, 18:00 PM

On tears and taxidermy

the first time i saw a tiger was in someone’s house all tall and lifeless; yet a tiger --
9 July 2021, 18:00 PM

Why Do We Still Swoon Over Mr. Darcy?

Fitzwilliam Darcy. You know who we are talking about.
9 July 2021, 14:01 PM

An essential read on knowledge management

The book, Knowledge Management, Governance and Sustainable Development: Lessons and Insights from Developing Countries (Routledge, 2020), edited by M Aslam Alam, Fakrul Alam, and Dilara Begum, is indeed a timely endeavour.
7 July 2021, 18:00 PM

Su’ad Abdul Khabeer on what it means to be Muslim and cool

Su'ad Abdul Khabeer is an Afro Latina Muslim, a hip-hop head, and the originator of the term "Muslim Cool". Through her book, Muslim Cool: Race, Religion,
7 July 2021, 18:00 PM

Love and feminism in the world of tech

Earlier this week, in a break from work-related correspondence, I sent author Tahmima Anam a personal email. I told her I was writing to her “as a reader” this time, because after months of scarfing down books for the sole purpose of writing reviews, The Startup Wife (Penguin India, 2021) made me forget that I was reading it for work.
7 July 2021, 18:00 PM

Reflections on University of Dhaka convocation speeches: Part I

One of the best ways to learn about the past 100 years of the University of Dhaka, for those proud of its history and truly concerned about its future, is to read the two volumes of Dhaka University:
1 July 2021, 11:36 AM

Malediction

“About a hundred years ago, our ancestors used to live in the Porir Desh.”
25 June 2021, 18:00 PM

Anointing with Love

Listen to the swish of the waves. Feel the breeze whisper caresses. See the mangroves stretch
25 June 2021, 18:00 PM

A prayer

What is the sadness that with
25 June 2021, 18:00 PM

To Bahadur Shah Zafar

The Emperor wrote a lonely note. In exile, he wept for a grave in his Native land. Colonials
25 June 2021, 18:00 PM

The book that I would like to read

Today I would like to talk about a book that I have been waiting to read for a very long time. After years of procrastination, luckily, I finally got hold of a copy and decided to write my thoughts about it—what I expect from it, why I would like to read it and of course, experiencing the sheer eagerness of waiting to turn the pages of a new book; a new adventure.
25 June 2021, 08:38 AM

Who is Ayad Akhtar?

When I began reading Homeland Elegies (Little, Brown and Company, 2020), all I knew about it was that it was a memoir; an account of the life of the author, Ayad Akhtar—a second-generation Muslim immigrant with Pakistani parents who migrated to America to further their careers as doctors.
23 June 2021, 18:00 PM

Unpacking Bangladesh’s obsession with Bollywood

Mrittika Anan Rahman (MAR): What does it say about Bollywood that it became mediators of so many of India and Bangladesh’s neighbouring cultures through its adaptation of stories such as Mughal-E-Azam, Umrao Jaan, or Laila Majnu?
23 June 2021, 18:00 PM

Colm Tóibín takes Henry James for a ride

In a detour from all the genres and topics that we review on this page, this monthly column on short stories is a little treat to ourselves—a short and delicious reminder of what the simple act of storytelling can accomplish.
23 June 2021, 18:00 PM