Three years ago, my family disappeared. It was at a place called Hidden Beach in northern...
Three years ago, my family disappeared. It was at a place called Hidden Beach in northern...
Placed fourth in the Tagore award for translated fiction 2021 Translated from the Bengali by...
Riti needed spectacles to see faces. She had left hers in the consultation room, back at the...
Adapted from a Mizo folklore A long time ago, in the village of Dungtlang, there lived a beautiful...
There is something they don’t tell you about grief. If you give it enough time, it turns into...
This is a story of the dying moments of an elderly woman in her own house, as her fondest memories materialize in front of her eyes and she cannot discern the line between reality and past recollections.
Kenneth M. Kapp was a Professor of Mathematics before pursuing diverse professions. Currently he is a homebrewer and runs whitewater rivers. Ken enjoys writing fiction.
Papree Rahaman is a noted writer from Dhaka, Bangladesh. She has many collections of short stories. Her notable novels include Bayan (2008), Palatia (2011), Nadidhara Abasik Elaka (2019). Papree also edited many important magazines and anthologies.
Adrian Bravi’s four short stories are instead teeming with a more homogeneous chorus of protagonists – gangs of children inhabiting poor neighborhoods in a small town in Argentina. The glue that holds together their esprit de corps is a childlike imaginative misreading of and sometimes contempt for the adult world, which leads them to exercise their power as a group by tormenting or further excluding marginalized people in their community.
Ishrat Tania is a poet and writer from Bangladesh. Her literary work revolves around perceptions and thoughts about human relations, despair, dreams, nature, transcendence, society and politics. Her published books in Bengali include Nemeche Ichche Niribili (2016), Beejpurush (2018), Mad Ek Swarnava Shishir (2020), Alaper Amphitheater (2020).