Lightning Should Have Fallen On Ghalib

Lightning Should Have Fallen On Ghalib
Author: Ghalib
Publisher: Ecco
Total Pages: 66
Release: 1999-08-11
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 9780880016865

Collects thirty poems by the renowned Indian poet and introduces the ghazal, a poetic form that comes from the Muslim tradition

Dozakhnama

Dozakhnama
Author: Rabisankar Bal
Publisher: Random House India
Total Pages: 418
Release: 2012-12-28
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 8184003803

Dozakhnama: Conversations in Hell is an extraordinary novel, a biography of Manto and Ghalib and a history of Indian culture rolled into one. Exhumed from dust, Manto’s unpublished novel surfaces in Lucknow. Is it real or is it a fake? In this dastan, Manto and Ghalib converse, entwining their lives in shared dreams. The result is an intellectual journey that takes us into the people and events that shape us as a culture. As one writer describes it, ‘I discovered Rabisankar Bal like a torch in the darkness of the history of this subcontinent. This is the real story of two centuries of our own country.’ Rabisankar Bal’s audacious novel, told by reflections in a mirror and forged in the fires of hell, is both an oral tale and a shield against oblivion. An echo of distant screams. Inscribed by the devil’s quill, Dozakhnama is an outstanding performance of subterranean memory.

A Two-Colored Brocade

A Two-Colored Brocade
Author: Annemarie Schimmel
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 562
Release: 2004-12
Genre: Persian poetry
ISBN: 9780807856208

Two-Colored Brocade: The Imagery of Persian Poetry

Ghalib

Ghalib
Author: Mirza Asadullah Khan Ghalib
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 330
Release: 2017-03-28
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 0231544006

This selection of poetry and prose by Ghalib provides an accessible and wide-ranging introduction to the preeminent Urdu poet of the nineteenth century. Ghalib's poems, especially his ghazals, remain beloved throughout South Asia for their arresting intelligence and lively wit. His letters—informal, humorous, and deeply personal—reveal the vigor of his prose style and the warmth of his friendships. These careful translations allow readers with little or no knowledge of Urdu to appreciate the wide range of Ghalib's poetry, from his gift for extreme simplicity to his taste for unresolvable complexities of structure. Beginning with a critical introduction for nonspecialists and specialists alike, Frances Pritchett and Owen Cornwall present a selection of Ghalib's works, carefully annotating details of poetic form. Their translation maintains line-for-line accuracy and thereby preserves complex poetic devices that play upon the tension between the two lines of each verse. The book includes whole ghazals, selected individual verses from other ghazals, poems in other genres, and letters. The book also includes a glossary, the Urdu text of the original poetry, and an appendix containing Ghalib's comments on his own verses.

Stealing Green Mangoes

Stealing Green Mangoes
Author: Sunil Dutta
Publisher: HarperCollins
Total Pages: 268
Release: 2019-10-01
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0062795910

A memoir—written in the wake of a cancer diagnosis—that zeroes in on the crux between two brothers: one who became an LAPD officer, and the other a terrorist Sunil Dutta is a twenty-year veteran of the LAPD. Before that, he was a biologist at the University of California and a translator of classic Indian poetry. Before that, he was a destitute refugee, one of so many uprooted by the genocidal violence surrounding the Partition of India. Back then, he had a brother. Back then, they were children together, chasing whatever fun and solace they could find in impossible conditions. Sunil looked up to Raju. He admired his strength, his character. Raju took a different path. He was arrested, he fled the law, he became a fugitive. He became a terrorist. Then he became a father—and then a murderer. After being diagnosed with Stage IV lung cancer later in life, Sunil urgently wanted to understand what choices had led he and his brother down such radically different paths. In Stealing Green Mangoes, Dutta takes us from his family home in Rajasthan to America, to France, to the streets of southeastern Los Angeles, homing in on the questions that tore him and Raju apart: Can you outgrow the madness that made you? Can you make peace with the ghosts of your past? A memoir with sweeping, spiritual ambitions, Stealing Green Mangoes tells the story of a man who pushed back against the forces that captured his own brother and built a compassionate, meaningful life in a broken world.

Ghalib

Ghalib
Author: Gopi Chand Narang
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 401
Release: 2017-10-03
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 019909151X

Mirza Asadullah Khan (1797–1869), popularly, Ghalib, is the most influential poet of the Urdu language. He is noted for the ghazals he wrote during his lifetime, which have since been interpreted and sung by different people in myriad ways. Ghalib’s popularity has today extended beyond the Indian subcontinent to the Hindustani diaspora around the world. In this book, Gopi Chand Narang studies Ghalib’s poetics by tracing the archetypical roots of his creative consciousness and enigmatic thought in Buddhist dialectical philosophy, particularly in the concept of shunyata. He underscores the importance of the Mughal era’s Sabke Hindi poetry, especially through Bedil, whom Ghalib considered his mentor. The author also engages with Ghalib criticism that has flourished since his death and analyses the important works of the poet, including pieces from early Nuskhas and Divan-e Ghalib, strengthening this central argument. Much has been written about Ghalib’s life and his poetry. A marked departure from this dominant trend, Narang’s book looks at Ghalib from different angles and places him in the galaxy of the great Eastern poets, stretching far beyond the boundaries of India and the Urdu language.

Ghazals of Ghalib

Ghazals of Ghalib
Author: Aijaz Ahmad
Publisher: Oxford Paperbacks
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1995-02-16
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780195635676

This imaginative approach to the work of the Urdu poet Ghalib (1797-1869) presents highly original renderings, made by seven well-known American poets, of Ghalib's ghazals.

Ghalib, Gandhi and the Gita

Ghalib, Gandhi and the Gita
Author: Vivek Iyer
Publisher: Polyglot Publications London
Total Pages: 292
Release: 2012
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 0955062837

Meta-metaphoricity in Ghalib, Gandhi & the Gita.

The Sibling Society

The Sibling Society
Author: Robert Bly
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 338
Release: 1997-05-27
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 0679781285

Where have all the grownups gone? In answering that question with the same freewheeling erudition and intuitive brilliance that made Iron John a national bestseller, poet, storyteller and translator Robert Bly tells us that we live in a "sibling society, " in which adults have regressed into adolescence and adolescents refuse to grow up.