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April 10, 2026
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"Photographers are the new Brahmins: we have no volition when they rule us."
"An hour's a symbolic duration."
"The dull pulse-like beat started at eleven oâclock at night. It was a new kind of music called ârapâ. It baffled Ananda even more than disco. He had puzzled and puzzled over why people would want to listen and even move their bodies to an angry, insistent onrush of words â words that rhymed, apparently, but had no echo or afterlife. It was as if they were an extension of the body: never had words sounded so alarmingly physical, and pure physicality lacks empathy, itâs machine-like."
"History was what had happened; class was something you read about in a book."
"âCalcutta has still not recovered from history: people mourn the past, and abhor it deeply.â"
"âAfternoonâs the most dreamless and introspective time of day, a sort of midnight of the daytime ...â"
"âThis is a little parable about cities and genres; how, while some of them lose their imaginative centrality, others take their place.â"
"âIts (the Leftâs) intensity derives from the fact that itâs a family largely composed of, in a manner of speaking, orphans of bhadralok history (for we hardly hear of the mothers and fathers of party members), brought together not by accident but by idealism and its cousin, ideology. Bonds of orphanhood and kinship are particularly charged (as Kipling showed us in The Jungle Book) when they are self-created, and each party member is probably a bit of everything â mother, father, sibling, friend â to every other member.â"
"â... invisibility was one of Bengali modernityâs prerequisites and cardinal achievements.â"
"âWriters donât so much write about their own lives as create them, Barthes said; itâs an oddly modern idea. Bengalis, similarly, had to make their own history. They did it in houses, tenements, and in neighbourhoods connected by stifling alleys that are no wider than a small room ... And this is why I feel, even now, that the most revealing places in Calcutta are not the museums or the great monuments ... but the houses and lanes in which people live.â"
"Tagore claims that the first time he experienced the thrill of poetry was when he encountered the childrenâs rhyme âJal pare/pata nareâ (âRain falls / The leaf trembles') in Iswarchandra Vidyasagarâs Bengali primer Barna Parichay (Introducing the Alphabet). There are at least two revealing things about this citation. The first is that, as Bengali scholars have remarked, Tagoreâs memory, and predilection, lead him to misquote and rewrite the lines. The actual rhyme is in sadhu bhasha, or âhighâ Bengali: âJal paritechhe / pata naritechheâ (âRain falleth / the leaf tremblethâ). This is precisely the sort of diction that Tagore chose for the English Gitanjali, which, with its thees and thous, has so tried our patience. Yet, as a Bengali poet, Tagoreâs instinct was to simplify, and to draw language closer to speech. The other reason the lines of the rhyme are noteworthy, especially with regard to Tagore, is â despite their deceptively logical progression â their non-consecutive character. âRain fallsâ and âthe leaf tremblesâ are two independent, stand-alone observations: they donât necessarily have to follow each other. Itâs a feature of poetry commented upon by William Empson in Some Versions of Pastoral: that itâs a genre that can get away with seamlessly joining two lines which are linked, otherwise, tenuously."
"âThe car horns created an anxious music, discordant but not indifferent.â"
"â... he sang with his eyes squeezed tight, as if he were dropping from a great height.â"
"â... a severe woman with a patient but unprevaricating gaze, who turned out to be Indira Gandhi.â"
"âInternationalismâ is a way of reading, and not a demography of readership ...â"
"âBy the second half of the nineteenth century, the importance of light and space as both metaphors or, and habitations for, the human self, or âthe substance called the mindâ, is absolute, especially with Tagore, who, in a letter in 1894 to his niece, would demand, not political freedom ... but âmore light, more spaceâ.â"
"âI drifted past heliotropic rubbish-heaps, elderly/white houses.â ( The Bandra Medical Store )"
"âNever to have lived is best. And the second best/is to grow old with the morning into/afternoon, and then to evening, when sundry shadows and gestures marry/like the vanished divisions of a shut fan.â ( St Cyril Road Sequence )"
"âTo the far left, above your shoulderâs gentle/curve, like golden pods, the sodium vapour/lights in the naval dockyard ... And before us,/a continuous, unreal flare of fire defined/the horizonâs extremity, a stain on a brow.â ( The Steamer )"
"âAs the sun came up, we/saw the leaves peer out, shivering.â ( Letter from the Hills )"
"In the oldest, bunched houses with tottering stairs,"
"These small freshwater fish"
"âIâm uncomfortable beginning at the beginning. Itâs not because Iâm clever, but because itâs a difficult thing, writing.â"
"âThis second time round, sheâd discovered that to be happy was not so much a self-sufficient, spontaneous emotion, such as you might feel in relation to a dream or a secret, but a way of reacting to the rest of the world; that to be happy this time, she must curb the natural human instinct to look up at the sky, with its all-encompassing definition, and gaze towards the immediate ground and horizon, with its lack of shape, or abode, or clear ending.â"
"â... this refined language of Indian modernity â an Indian language that was actually first used as a first language by a home-grown cosmopolitan elite â enough to say, with or without humour, âAmi tomake bhalobashiâ (âI love youâ) or âApni kothai thhaken?â (âWhere do you live?). These stray statements performed an incantatory âopen sesameâ â into the bounded, charmed, small-scale world of âBengalinessâ. The âhonoraryâ Bengali might be myopic; might be an aficionado of art-house cinema; might be politically left wing; might have taste for lyric poetry; a tendency towards the autobiographical; an appetite for fish; or display none of these traits.â"
"There was a gulmohar tree in the lane, the flaming orange flowers erupting from within, and banyan trees, private and removed as ancient pilgrims."
"There was a special purpose in these throws, for the readers of Ganashakti were fellow-travellers of the Communist party, they believed in its necessity and vision, and an inexplicable bond was formed between the distributor, whose every aim with the bundle seemed to be a salute, and the silent house."
"Tinkling sounds came from outside, of hammering and chiselling, as labourers worked like bees, and seven- or eight-storeyed buildings rose in the place of ancestral mansions that had been razed cruelly to the ground, climbing up like ladders through screens of dust. An old mansion opposite the veranda had been repainted white, to its last banister and pillar, so that it looked like a set of new teeth. ... In another sphere altogether, birds took off from a tree or parapet, or the roof of some rich Marwariâs house, startling and speckling the neutral sky. Not a moment was still or like another moment. In a window in a servantsâ outhouse attached to a mansion â both the masterâs house and the servantsâ lost in a bond now anachronistic and buried â a light shone even at this time of the day, beacon of winter."
"... my mother will settle on the rug and unclip the bellows, pulling and pushing them with a mild aquatic motion with her left hand, the fingers of the right hand flowering upon the keys, the wedding-bangle suspended around her wrist. Each time the bellows are pushed, the round holes on the back open and close like eyes. Without the body music is not possible; it provides the hollow space for resonance as does the curved wooden box of the violin or the round urn of the sitar. At the moment of singing, breath tips in the swelling diaphragm as water does in a pitcher. The voice-box itself is a microscopic harp, its cords tautening and relaxing with each inflection."
"The armchairs, with their flat, sedentary cushions, were designed for society, but the bed was made for solitude. It had a straitened and measured narrowness, an austere frame made to contain the curves of a single body, to circumscribe it, carry it, give it a place, and when I slept at night, I possessed it entirely."
"While reading the Times of India each morning, my father spares a minute for the cartoon by R. K. Laxman. While my mother is, like a magician, making untidy sheets disappear in the bedroom and producing fresh towels in the bathroom, or braving bad weather in the kitchen, my father, in the extraordinary Chinese calm of the drawing-room, is dmiring the cartoon by R. K. Laxman, and, if my mother happens to be there, unselfishly sharing it with her. She, as expected, misunderstands it completely, laughing not at the joke but at the expressions on the faces of the caricatures, and at the hilarious fact that they talk to each other like human beings."
"Years ago, my mother and I fell in love with Busybeeâs voice, its calm, even tone, and a smile which was always audible in the language. My father, meanwhile, is clipping his nails fastidiously, letting them fall on to an old, spread-out copy of the Times of India, till he sneezes explosively, as he customarily does, sending the crescent-shaped nail-clippings flying into the universe."
"The grown-ups snapped the chillies (each made a sound terse as a satirical retort), and scattered the tiny, deadly seeds in their food."
"On the big bed, Mamima and Sandeepâs mother began to dream, sprawled in vivid crab-like postures. His aunt lay on her stomach, her arms bent as if she were swimming to the edge of a lake; his mother lay on her back, her feet (one of which had a scar on it) arranged in the joyous pose of a dancer."
"The gutters in the lane overflowed with an odd, languid grace. Water filled the lane; rose from ankle-deep to knee-deep. Insects swam in circles. Urchins splashed about haphazardly, while Saraswati returned from market with a shopping-bag in her hands; insects swam away to avoid this clumsy giant. Her wet footprints printing the floor of the house were as rich with possibility as the first footprint Crusoe found on his island."
"She would sweep the floor â unending expanses, acres and acres of floor â with a short broom called the jhadu, swiping away the dust in an arc with its long tail, which reminded one of the drooping tail of some nameless, exotic bird."
"There has been writing for 10 days now"
"Kierkegaard is not regarded as a philosopher, nor are Feuerbach and his pupil Nietzsche, but they are extraordinarily instructive. All who construct an empty system with facts are fools. Such is Bostrom, who tries to subtilise conceptions, analyse ideas, and classify and arrange God, man, and human life under heads."
"I'd love to see the whole of your sex swimming in a sea of blood. The way I feel I could drink out of your skull. I could eat your heart roasted whole! You think I'm weak! My father will come home - find his money stolen! He'll send for the sheriff - and I'll tell him everything. Then there'll be peace and quiet ... forever."
"There was a time... when no political idea of the 20th century was comparable to communism (or the October Revolution as its symbol), a time when nothing attracted Western intellectuals and people all around the world more powerfully or emotionally. Raymond Aron called the Russian Revolution the âopium of intellectuals.â But the idea of communism is at least two thousand years old. We can find it in Platoâs teachings about an ideal, correct state; in Aristophanesâ dreams about a time when âeverything will belong to everyone.â ⌠In Thomas More and Tommaso Campanella ⌠Later in Saint-Simon, Fourier and Robert Owen. There is something in the Russian spirit that compels it to try to turn these dreams into reality."
"I will take the liberty of saying that we missed the chance we had in the 1990s. The question was posed: what kind of country should we have? A strong country, or a worthy one where people can live decently? We chose the former â a strong country. Once again we are living in an era of power. Russians are fighting Ukrainians. Their brothers. My father is Belarusian, my mother, Ukrainian. That's the way it is for many people. Russian planes are bombing Syria ... A time full of hope has been replaced by a time of fear. The era has turned around and headed back in time. The time we live in now is second-hand ... Sometimes I am not sure that I've finished writing the history of the "Red" man."
"Twenty years ago, we bid farewell to the âRed Empireâ of the Soviets with curses and tears. We can now look at that past more calmly, as an historical experiment. This is important, because arguments about socialism have not died down. A new generation has grown up with a different picture of the world, but many young people are reading Marx and Lenin again. In Russian towns there are new museums dedicated to Stalin, and new monuments have been erected to him. The âRed Empireâ is gone, but the âRed Man,â homo sovieticus, remains. He endures."
"My teacher, Ales Adamovich, whose name I mention today with gratitude, felt that writing prose about the nightmares of the 20th century was sacrilege. Nothing may be invented. You must give the truth as it is. A "super-literature" is required. The witness must speak. Nietzsche's words come to mind â no artist can live up to reality. He can't lift it. It always troubled me that the truth doesn't fit into one heart, into one mind, that truth is somehow splintered. There's a lot of it, it is varied, and it is strewn about the world."
"I used to think I could understand everything and express everything. Or almost everything. I remember when I was writing my book about the war in Afghanistan, Zinky Boys, I went to Afghanistan and they showed me some of the foreign weapons that had been captured from the Afghan fighters. I was amazed at how perfect their forms were, how perfectly a human thought had been expressed. There was an officer standing next to me and he said, "If someone were to step on this Italian mine that you say is so pretty it looks like a Christmas decoration, there would be nothing left of them but a bucket of meat. You'd have to scrape them off the ground with a spoon." When I sat down to write this, it was the first time I thought, "Is this something I should say?" I had been raised on great Russian literature, I thought you could go very very far, and so I wrote about that meat. But the Zoneâit's a separate world, a world within the rest of the worldâand it's more powerful than anything literature has to say."
"Suffering is our capital, our natural resource. Not oil or gas â but suffering. It is the only thing we are able to produce consistently. I'm always looking for the answer: why doesn't our suffering convert into freedom? Is it truly all in vain? Chaadayev was right: Russia is a country without memory, it's a space of total amnesia, a virgin consciousness for criticism and reflection."
"Death is the fairest thing in the world. No one's ever gotten out of it. The earth takes everyoneâthe kind, the cruel, the sinners. Aside from that, there's no fairness on earth."
"What can art accomplish? The purpose of art is to accumulate the human within the human being."
"Is there anything more frightening than people?"
"I drove to a hospital for Afghan civilians with a group of nurses â we brought presents for the children. Toys, candy, cookies. I had about five teddy bears. We arrived at the hospital, a long barracks. No one has more than a blanket for bedding. A young Afghan woman approached me, holding a child in her arms. She wanted to say something â over the last ten years almost everyone here has learned to speak a little Russian â and I handed the child a toy, which he took with his teeth. "Why his teeth?" I asked in surprise. She pulled the blanket off his tiny body â the little boy was missing both arms. "It was when your Russians bombed." Someone held me up as I began to fall."
"They're hardly given to conventional writers, and a writer like myself is hardly given a knighthood."