For Now, It Is Night

Stories

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Pub Date 5 Mar 2024 | Archive Date 13 Dec 2023

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Description

“An enthralling — and welcome — reclamation of Kaul’s fiction. . . Kaul’s work shimmers with questions of reality and illusion, home and exile.” – The New York Times Book Review

17 lively short stories provide an irreverent examination of exile, drawn from the ever-observant pen of one of Kashmir's most celebrated writers


Hari Krishna Kaul, one of the most celebrated Kashmiri writers, published most of his work between 1972 and 2000. His short stories, shaped by the social crisis and political instability in Kashmir, explore – with a keen eye for detail, biting wit, and deep empathy – themes of isolation, individual and collective alienation, corruption, and the social mores of a community that experienced a loss of homeland, culture, and language.

In these pages, we will find friends stuck forever in the same class at school while the world changes around them; travelers forced to seek shelter in a battered, windy hostel after a landslide; parents struggling to deal with displacement as they move away from Kashmir with their children, or loneliness as their children leave in search of better prospects; the cabin fever of living through a curfew . . .

Brilliantly translated in a unique collaborative project, For Now, It Is Night brings a comprehensive selection of Kaul’s stories to English readers for the first time.
“An enthralling — and welcome — reclamation of Kaul’s fiction. . . Kaul’s work shimmers with questions of reality and illusion, home and exile.” – The New York Times Book Review

17 lively short...

Advance Praise

“Kaul’s stories are a testament to the power of literature to illuminate the subtleties of human experience, transcending regional and cultural boundaries, and provoking contemplation to find meaning in the entire scheme of seemingly random events, experiences, and actions.” – Manisha Gangahar, The Tribune

“With an impressive eye for detail, biting wit, and deep empathy… Kaul provides an irreverent examination of exile that resonates across time and place.” – Nawaid Anjum, The Federal

“Masterfully translated by Tanveer Ajsi, Gowhar Fazili, Gowhar Yaqoob and Kaul’s niece Kalpana Raina, these stories transport readers into the cultural essence of Kashmir while exploring timeless themes of love, morality, death, and the paradoxes underlying human relationships.” – Muhammad Nadeem, Kashmir Life

“Kaul’s stories are a testament to the power of literature to illuminate the subtleties of human experience, transcending regional and cultural boundaries, and provoking contemplation to find meaning...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781953861788
PRICE US$22.00 (USD)
PAGES 208

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Average rating from 9 members


Featured Reviews

Interesting little vignettes in a very 'subcontinental' style; imperfect, but tender and humane. Translation very Indian in cadence, and not very hand-holding; worked beautifully for me in both respects, and felt very true to how I imagine the original would read. Particular favourite was 'One Sahib and the Other'.

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If you are an Indian, you will love this book more. If I have to review this short story collection in a line, I will say this.

Because we know what the characters are actually talking about and what they are referring to in each story when it’s actually not written.

A collection of seventeen stories which I feel is a really good read. You will get the original story vibes and you will not get any familiarity with any of the stories or characters. Each story has a different meaning and feel to it.

I liked all the stories and none of them appear to be hurriedly written or otherwise.

I feel the translation is perfect and the stories are quite original/unique.

The stories and the characters reflect how people from diverse cultures and communities survive or thrive today. You will get to meet characters which we can’t categorise in a conventional sense.

I will tell you that you won’t be able to ignore any of these stories. Most of them are thrilling and suspenseful while others feel like they are trying to pull you into an alternate universe where you can’t escape from. But they are stories which is contemporary and quite realistic. The writing is really good!

Thank you, Aechipegalo, for the advance reading copy.

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Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for providing me with an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

I wish i could learn every language in the world so that i could read works in the languages they're written in.

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Lovely short story collection. It was interesting to read about how individuals with modern and traditional mindsets found ways to live together in a fast changing society. Being a non-Indian some of the cultural and religious references definitely went over my head but I enjoyed it all the same.

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Magical, brimming with a sense of whimsy and mirth, these short stories are endlessly readable. This book invites engagement, invites repeated returns to the text, each new viewing uncovering a new twist of phrase or clever construction.

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I found this collection to be highly impactful and meaningful, especially in today's climate. Thank you to the author for sharing so openly and genuinely.

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“For Now, It is Night” – Hari Krishna Kaul (translated from Kashmiri by Kalpana Raina, Tanveer Ajsi, Gowhar Fazili and Gowhar Yaquoob.

An unexpected gem, this – my thanks to @archipelagobooks and @netgalley for a chance to read this one, which is published on 5th March (in the US, at least, not sure about a UK date).

This is a collection of 17 stories gathered from across the career of Kashmiri writer Hari Krishna Kaul, from 1972 up until 2000. And I do mean “gathered”, as it appears that the translators had to scour several libraries to find partly damaged copies of some works, so credit must go to them for that.

What we get are stories of ordinary people in a complicated and often harsh world, and the instability of the Kashmiri region. I believe the author himself was forced to leave for Delhi in 1990, and several of the later stories in the collection deal with displacement and the absurdity of the corruption of the situation (see “The Tongue and the Egg”, for example). These stories are tinged with sadness for a culture lost, and the characters must reflect Kaul’s feelings of detachment in a new place, far from the culture he was fighting to maintain.

There are stories of mundane family hostilities (“Sunshine”, which also made me laugh at points), sly stabs at the systems of Kashmir that venture into fantasy (“Tomorrow – A Never-Ending Story”, possibly my favourite), and overall, the collection covers a lot of themes and characters to give a portrait of a world I knew next to nothing about. Really interesting collection, recommended to everyone out there who wants to expand their reading horizons!

Read for #shortstoryfebruary hosted by @translatedgems and @mystormingbooks.

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