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Truth/Untruth
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Truth/Untruth
Current price: $16.46
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Barnes and Noble
Truth/Untruth
Current price: $16.46
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Size: Audiobook
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A trenchant, darkly humorous, and unsentimental look at Calcutta society.
Set in Calcutta in the mid-1980s,
Truth/Untruth
is a fast-paced thriller built around the death of the pregnant Jamunaa maid in a newly affluent residential apartment complexand Arjun, the upwardly mobile businessman who seduced her. Packed with a cast of colorful characters, this novel is a trenchant, darkly humorous, and unsentimental look at the different segments of Calcutta society: from the middle-class culture vultures to the unscrupulous “promoter” class and the domestic helpers and slum goons who form an intrinsic part of the city’s life. All are implicated in a complex web of guilt and bizarre twists and turns. Sex, lies, deaththe great modernist themesrun like a thread through this book, exposing societal greed, lust, corruption, and moral hypocrisy with a sardonic tone that spares none. An unusual novel by an author who is otherwise known for her hard-hitting activist-feminist stories,
underlines the exploitative vicious cycle that defines urban relations between the haves and have-nots.
Set in Calcutta in the mid-1980s,
Truth/Untruth
is a fast-paced thriller built around the death of the pregnant Jamunaa maid in a newly affluent residential apartment complexand Arjun, the upwardly mobile businessman who seduced her. Packed with a cast of colorful characters, this novel is a trenchant, darkly humorous, and unsentimental look at the different segments of Calcutta society: from the middle-class culture vultures to the unscrupulous “promoter” class and the domestic helpers and slum goons who form an intrinsic part of the city’s life. All are implicated in a complex web of guilt and bizarre twists and turns. Sex, lies, deaththe great modernist themesrun like a thread through this book, exposing societal greed, lust, corruption, and moral hypocrisy with a sardonic tone that spares none. An unusual novel by an author who is otherwise known for her hard-hitting activist-feminist stories,
underlines the exploitative vicious cycle that defines urban relations between the haves and have-nots.