HTML5 Icon

Cobalt blue

By: Kundalkar, Sachin
Contributor(s): Pinto, Jerry
Language: English Publisher: Haryana -- Penguin India -- 2013Description: 228pISBN: 9780143460091Subject(s): Literature | Fiction | MarathiDDC classification: 891.46371 KUN/C Summary: "Cobalt Blue is a tale of rapturous love and fierce heartbreak told with tenderness and unsparing clarity. Brother and sister Tanay and Anuja both fall in love with the same man, an artist lodging in their family home in Pune, in western India. He seems like the perfect tenant, ready with the rent and happy to listen to their mother's musings on the imminent collapse of Indian culture. But he's also a man of mystery. He has no last name. He has no family, no friends, no history, and no plans for the future. When he runs away with Anuja, he overturns the family's lives. Translated from Marathi by acclaimed novelist and critic Jerry Pinto, Sachin Kundalkar's elegantly wrought and exquisitely spare novel explores the disruption of a traditional family by a free-spirited stranger to examine a generation in transition. Intimate, moving, sensual, and wry in its portrait of young love, Cobalt Blue is a frank and lyrical exploration of gay life in India that recalls the work of Edmund White and Alan Hollinghurst-of people living in emotional isolation, attempting to find long-term intimacy in relationships that until recently were barely conceivable to them. "-- Provided by publisher.
Item type Current location Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Literature Literature CENTRAL LIBRARY
Literature (Sahyadri Campus)
Fiction 891.46371 KUN/C Available 08236

"Cobalt Blue is a tale of rapturous love and fierce heartbreak told with tenderness and unsparing clarity. Brother and sister Tanay and Anuja both fall in love with the same man, an artist lodging in their family home in Pune, in western India. He seems like the perfect tenant, ready with the rent and happy to listen to their mother's musings on the imminent collapse of Indian culture. But he's also a man of mystery. He has no last name. He has no family, no friends, no history, and no plans for the future. When he runs away with Anuja, he overturns the family's lives. Translated from Marathi by acclaimed novelist and critic Jerry Pinto, Sachin Kundalkar's elegantly wrought and exquisitely spare novel explores the disruption of a traditional family by a free-spirited stranger to examine a generation in transition. Intimate, moving, sensual, and wry in its portrait of young love, Cobalt Blue is a frank and lyrical exploration of gay life in India that recalls the work of Edmund White and Alan Hollinghurst-of people living in emotional isolation, attempting to find long-term intimacy in relationships that until recently were barely conceivable to them. "-- Provided by publisher.

Imp. Notice: It is hereby requested to all the library users to very carefully use the library resources. If the library resources are not found in good condition while returning to the library, the Central Library will not accept the damaged items and a fresh copy of the same should be replaced by the user. Marking/ highlighting on library books with pencil or ink, scribbling, tearing the pages or spoiling the same in any other way will be considered damaged.