Herbert by Nabarun Bhattacharya & Sunandini Banerjee


ISBN
9780857426499
Published
Binding
Hardcover
Pages
166
Dimensions
127 x 203mm

May 1992. In Russia, Boris Yeltsin is showing millions of communists the spectre of capitalism. Yugoslavia is disintegrating. United Germany is uncertain about their next move, and communism is collapsing all around. And in a corner of old Calcutta, Herbert Sarkar, sole proprietor of a company that delivers messages from the dead, decides to give up the ghost. Decides to give up his aunt and uncle, his friends and foes, his fondness for kites, his aching heart that broke for Buki, his top terrace from where he stared up at the sky, his Ulster overcoat with buttons like big black medals, his notebook full of poems, his Park Street every evening when the sun goes down, his memory of a Russian girl running across the great black earth as the soldiers lift their guns and get ready to fire, his fairy who beat her wings against his window and filled his room with blue light . . .

Now in a new translation, Herbert, the beloved cult favourite by Nabarun Bhattacharya, and winner of the 1997 Sahitya Akademi Award, is a ‘scathingly satiric, wildly energetic, and yet depply tender’ portrayal of a doomed young man and a city struggling to resist forces that, alas, prove to be entirely beyond their control.

Praise for Herbert

‘This first U.S. publication brings off a remarkable resurrection, one that erupts full-blooded, alive with laughter, stink and rage.’

— John Domini, Washington Post

‘Swift and strange, [Herbert] tells the story of its titular character, an orphan whose life is characterized by loss and longing: a sweeping view of the richness and the turmoil of Bengali culture, literature, and politics in the twentieth century.’

— New Yorker

‘[Sunandini] Banerjee’s acrobatic translation is both enormously fun and true to the radical content. The writing disrupts the hegemony of the English language from the inside by celebrating the multilingualism possible within it.’

— Asymptote

‘Nimble and vivid, Bhattacharya’s slippery narrative slithers forward and sideways through time: an acute, idiosyncratic reading experience.’

— Publishers Weekly

‘What is needed [now] is a kind of novel that attends to how society is being organized by certain vested interests; a novel that goes to the heart—rather, goes for the jugular—of the economic system itself. [Herbert] is prophetic of this tradition to come.’

— Ratik Asokan, 4Columns

‘[Herbert] reads like Rainer Maria Rilke’s Notebooks of Malte Laurids Brigge set in Calcutta. Featuring a young man with an open channel to the dead who drinks and grieves to excess, it is a mosaic of manic and immersive episodes. It is a spinning drunken stumble through a city that feels menacingly sensual.’

— Nate McNamara, LitHub
Christmas Catalogue 2024 x BookFrenzy
21.24
RRP: $24.99
15% off RRP


This product is unable to be ordered online. Please check in-store availability.
Instore Price: $24.99
Enter your Postcode or Suburb to view availability and delivery times.

You might also like

Here One Moment
34.99
22.99
34% Off
Intermezzo
34.99
22.99
34% Off
Blue Sisters
34.99
24.99
29% Off
The Diamond Hunter
32.99
14.99
55% Off
Sanctuary
32.99
14.99
55% Off
The Fallen Woman
34.99
22.00
37% Off
Birds Of A Feather
32.99
14.99
55% Off
My Favourite Mistake
34.99
22.99
34% Off
Dreamland
34.99
14.99
57% Off
By Any Other Name
34.99
22.99
34% Off
Lola In The Mirror
32.99
19.99
39% Off
The Two Lost Mountains
39.99
14.99
63% Off
Juice
49.99
36.99
26% Off
The Women
34.99
24.99
29% Off
The Heist
34.99
14.99
57% Off
Joy
32.99
19.99
39% Off
River Song
39.99
26.99
33% Off
The Heart Is A Star
32.99
14.99
55% Off

RRP refers to the Recommended Retail Price as set out by the original publisher at time of release.
The RRP set by overseas publishers may vary to those set by local publishers due to exchange rates and shipping costs.
Due to our competitive pricing, we may have not sold all products at their original RRP.