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Nilanjana Roy

    Nilanjana Roy erschafft Erzählungen, die sich mit den komplexen Psychen menschlicher und tierischer Charaktere auseinandersetzen und soziale Dynamiken mit scharfem Blick erforschen. Ihre Prosa ist reich und eindringlich und zeugt von einem tiefen Verständnis für das Innenleben und die Motivationen ihrer Figuren. Roy hinterfragt häufig Themen wie Meinungsfreiheit und Zensur und untersucht gleichzeitig, wie wir die Welt um uns herum lesen und interpretieren. Durch ihre Fiktion und ihre journalistische Arbeit bietet sie eine einzigartige Perspektive auf die indische Gesellschaft und universelle Aspekte der menschlichen Erfahrung, die den Leser zum Nachdenken anregt.

    I gatti dal cuore d'ambra
    Black River
    The Hundred Names of Darkness
    • The Hundred Names of Darkness

      • 416 Seiten
      • 15 Lesestunden
      4,2(257)Abgeben

      "A delight to read. Eliot's Old Possum would have enjoyed these Practical Indian Cats." Salman Rushdie In the sequel and conclusion to her critically acclaimed, internationally bestselling novel, The Wildings, Nilanjana Roy takes us back to the Delhi neighbourhood of Nizamuddin, and its unforgettable cats--Mara, Southpaw, Katar, Hulo and Beraal. As they recover slowly from their terrible battle with the feral cats, they find their beloved locality changing around them. Winter brings an army of predators--humans, vicious dogs, snakes, bandicoots--along with the cold and a scarcity of food...Unless Mara can help them find a safe haven, their small band will be wiped out forever. With the assistance of a motley group of friends including Doginder, a friendly stray; Hatch, a cheel who is afraid of the sky; Thomas Mor, an affable peacock; Jethro Tail, the mouse who roared; and the legendary Senders of Delhi, Mara and her band set out on an epic journey to find a place where they can live free from danger.

      The Hundred Names of Darkness
    • It takes a village to kill a child...The village of Teetarpur outside Delhi, is famous for nothing until one of its children is found dead, hanging from the branch of a Jamun tree. In the largely Hindu village, suspicion quickly falls on an itinerant Muslin man, Mansoor. It's up to the local policeman Sub-Inspector Ombir Singh to get to the truth. With only one officer under him, and only a single working revolver between them, can he bring justice to a grieving father an an angry village - or will Teetarpur demand vengeance instead? This shockingly powerful literary thriller is set in a brilliantly realised modern India simmering with tension and riven by growing religious intolerance.

      Black River