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Posts by Nilanjana S Roy

So excited to announce this! Available only in India for now.

9 months ago 26 5 5 0
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'There Was Something Beautiful About The Two People' 'In a world which is full of categories, hatred and ideologies, there was this basic decency.'

"But in a world which is full of categories, hatred and ideologies, there was this basic decency. There was something beautiful about the two people."

~ Basharat Peer on Homebound

www.rediff.com/movies/repor...

11 months ago 3 1 0 0
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Banu Mushtaq has consistently challenged chauvinistic religious interpretations Banu Mushtaq's stories are simple narratives of complex circumstances in which women from the margins of society find themselves

+ Lawyer, activist, reporter for the fiery Lankesh Patrike — the radical wellsprings of Bani Mushtaq's writing.

www.theweek.in/theweek/leis...

11 months ago 8 3 0 0
‘With an accent’: How Deepa Bhasthi translated International Booker Prize-shortlisted ‘Heart Lamp’ An interview with Deepa Bhasthi, whose translation of Banu Mushtaq’s ‘Heart Lamp’ is the first Kannada – and second Indian – book to make the Prize shortlist.

"The aim of translation, especially in former colonies like ours where English is acquired along with a complicated baggage, should never be to write in “proper” English [but] to introduce the reader to new words that come loaded with the hum of another language."

scroll.in/article/1081...

11 months ago 3 1 0 0
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“This is not just my victory, but a chorus of voices often left unheard. A thousand fireflies lighting a single sky, brief, brilliant and utterly collective.”

~ Banu Mushtaq in her acceptance speech.

#InternationalBooker2025 #internationalbooker

11 months ago 19 8 2 1
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The @financialtimes.com editorial board on the west's shameful silence on Gaza.

(Proud to be a small part of this paper.)

11 months ago 8 1 0 0
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Breaking news: Tensions between the two countries have been rising since last month when New Delhi blamed Islamabad for an attack by militants in Indian-administered Kashmir that killed 26 people. www.ft.com/content/c03e...

11 months ago 126 34 21 8

Note the reference in the Pulitzer designation to her "fearlessness that led to her departure from the news organization after 17 years"

11 months ago 900 152 7 3
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Palestinian poet Mosab Abu Toha wins Pulitzer prize for commentary Renowned poet and author wins prize for series of New Yorker essays on suffering of Palestinians in Gaza The renowned Palestinian poet and author, Mosab Abu Toha, is among this year’s Pulitzer prize winners. Abu Toha was awarded for a series of essays in the New Yorker documenting the lives and suffering of Palestinians in Gaza, where he has lived nearly all his life. Continue reading...

Palestinian poet Mosab Abu Toha wins Pulitzer prize for commentary

11 months ago 296 77 3 5
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"Let It Be A Tale": Palestinian Poet Mosab Abu Toha Wins Pulitzer Palestinian poet and author Mosab Abu Toha has won the Pulitzer Prize for his powerful essays, chronicling the physical and emotional toll of the ongoing war in Gaza.

"I have just won a Pulitzer Prize for Commentary.

Let it bring hope
Let it be a tale."

~ Mosab Abu Toha, Palestinian poet and Pulitzer winner:

www.ndtv.com/world-news/l...

11 months ago 13 10 0 1
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A Deep Read interview. Percival Everett and the making of James This spring, Percival Everett spoke with Dan White, Humanities Writer at UC Santa Cruz, about the creation of his 2024 National Book Award-winning novel James, a book that reoccupies and reimagines Ma...

Percival Everett:

"That is the first thing fascists do—go after books and art—because that is where we are most human. And it is not writing that I consider so wonderfully subversive. It is actually reading, the most subversive thing we can do. "

news.ucsc.edu/2025/04/a-de...

#writing

11 months ago 13 5 0 2
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‘The Interview’: Ocean Vuong was Ready to Kill. A Moment of Grace Changed His Life. The poet and novelist on the real reason he became a writer.

Ocean Vuong, in an interview that cracks open so much, so beautifully.

"The syllabus was Baldwin, Annie Dillard, Foucault. And I realized #writing was not writing a respectable email to get a job. It was a medium of understanding suffering. That’s when it changed."

www.nytimes.com/2025/05/03/m...

11 months ago 12 4 0 2

In the 1990s, I dived joyously into the Internet. Yes, it had sleazy alleys — but mostly, using it felt like an exploration, a ramble through diverse communities.

AI was born out of extractive rapaciousness. Using LLMs feels.... weirdly wrong, like wandering into a profit-obsessed simulacrum. 🤖

11 months ago 6 1 0 0

And Tim Berners-Lee on AI, in 2025:

"The question is, who does it work for?... "I want AIs to work for me to make the choices that I want to make... Always ask an AI, 'who do you work for?' Whose better interests are you pursuing in your interests and your decisions?"

11 months ago 2 1 0 0
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Small notes: Tim Berners-Lee in 1999:

"Inventing the WWW involved my growing realisation that there was a power in arranging ideas in an unconstrained, weblike way.The Web arose as the answer to an open challenge, through the swirling together of influences, ideas, & realisations from many sides."

11 months ago 1 1 1 0

Small notes: how easily AI Overview is fooled by fake proverbs ("the crow and the scarecrow are no friends", "the deepest well holds the sweetest water" and other nonsense).

It provides such plausible back-formations and stories. You wonder how long the Web as we know it will remain truthful.

11 months ago 5 1 1 0
Graphic novels are the ideal response to authoritarian regimes -- column by Nilanjana Roy, featuring art from You Must Take Part in Revolution, by Melissa Chan and Badiucao

Graphic novels are the ideal response to authoritarian regimes -- column by Nilanjana Roy, featuring art from You Must Take Part in Revolution, by Melissa Chan and Badiucao

Illustrations from You Must Take Part in Revolution, by Melissa Chan and Badiucao

Illustrations from You Must Take Part in Revolution, by Melissa Chan and Badiucao

The opening paras of my column on authoritarianism, dissidents, and graphic novels.

The opening paras of my column on authoritarianism, dissidents, and graphic novels.

"We are facing a global crisis," says the artist and graphic novelist Badiucao. "The outcome is either autocratic empires dividing the world or World War III."

A generation of dissidents and exiles turn to the graphic novel/ memoir — my column for the @financialtimes.com.

archive.is/6fxlR

11 months ago 4 3 0 0

"Camellia sinensis herbs, flash-cooked in boiling water to make a light but stimulating broth." Could so easily be a thing. :)

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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If this ain't a goddamn perfect eulogy, I don't know what is.

1 year ago 20233 2585 115 89

I have tariffed
the penguins
that are on
Heard Island

and which
you were probably
assuming
did not export goods

forgive me
they were taking advantage of us
so cunning
and so cold

1 year ago 28773 7026 551 338
Lost and Found, by Nilanjana Roy
Lost and Found, by Nilanjana Roy YouTube video by Poetry in Parks

And some people
Write poems every day of their lives
But not on the page, not on the screen…

Lost and Found by @nilanjanaroy.bsky.social
(read by @zigzackly.bsky.social )

youtu.be/s3kTfnNDADM?...

1 year ago 5 4 0 1

I am so touched that you would go to the trouble. Thank you.

(Apologies for this late response — I've been travelling.)

1 year ago 2 0 0 0

Thanks — the UK/ US edition was published by Pushkin Press in April/ September 2024.
The Indian edition was published by Westland in November 2022.

(There's often a substantial time lag between the Indian and overseas editions.)

1 year ago 0 0 1 0

Thank you (and have a wonderful 2025!).

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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Watching One Hundred Years of Solitude, spooling the episodes out slowly so as to let the memory of the book return.

Many years ago, GGM set conditions for film-makers: the entire book must be filmed, but only one chapter, two minutes long, was to be released each year, for one hundred years.

1 year ago 13 2 1 0
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‘I couldn’t cry over my children like everyone else’: the tragedy of Palestinian journalist Wael al-Dahdouh The long read: After his wife and two of his children were killed in Gaza, Al Jazeera journalist Wael al-Dahdouh became famous around the world for his decision to keep reporting. But this was just th...

Persons of the Year — two whose courage and integrity under extreme loss and horror stood out to me:

Gisèle Pélicot, who spoke for so many when she said that "shame must change sides".

And Wael al-Dahdouh: "They took revenge on us through our children."

www.theguardian.com/world/2024/o...

1 year ago 18 8 0 1
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The 50 best paperbacks of 2024 Can’t bear to carry around yet another hardback? Or do you balk at the horror of a £40 book? Paperbacks are the answer: here are some of this year’s finest

🧽 Squeaky Clean by @callummcsorley.bsky.social and ⚫️ Black River by @nilanjanaroy.bsky.social BOTH @thetimes.com Best Paperbacks of 2024! www.thetimes.com/culture/book...

1 year ago 6 2 0 0

Thanks for the shoutout, much appreciated!

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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lovely piece on the threat AI poses to book translation, which doubles as an ode to translators: www.ft.com/content/3dff...

1 year ago 192 55 11 4

Thanks for taking a chance on the river and me, @pushkinpress-us.bsky.social!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0