An Atlas of Impossible Things

£7.99
ISBN
9781847247643
Delivery
In Stock Online
Click & Collect
Stock delivered to London Store within two working days
A love story -- as beautiful as it is unbearably sad -- about two people who choose each other when others have abandoned them
Beginning in 1907 with the founding of a factory in Songarh, a small provincial town where narrow attitudes prevail, the story is of three generations of an Indian family, brilliantly told, in which a sensitive and intelligent foundling boy orphan who is casteless and without religion and Bakul, the motherless granddaughter of the house, grow up together. The boy, Mukunda, spends his time as a servant in the house or reading the books of Mrs Barnum, an Anglo-Englishwoman whose life was saved long ago by Bakul''s grandmother, by now demented by loneliness.

Mrs Barnum gives Mukunda the run of her house, but as he and Bakul grow, they become aware that their intense closeness is becoming something else, and Bakul''s father is warned to separate them. He banishes Mukunda to a school in Calcutta. The many strands of this intensely-fashioned narrative converge when Mukunda, by now a successful businessman, returns to Songarh years after he has been exiled from the only home he knew, to resolve the family''s destiny.
More Information
Weight 0.222000
Author Anuradha Roy
Availability IP
Department Literature
Format Paperback
ISBN 9781847247643
Pages 320
Published 05/03/2009
Publisher Quercus
Section Literature
Series TRAV LIT
Size Unfolded 13x20cm
Write Your Own Review
You're reviewing:An Atlas of Impossible Things
Copyright © 1853-2024 Edward Stanford Ltd. All rights reserved.