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Ice Candy Man

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Ice Candy Man

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Highlights

  • 276

    Pages
  • 9780140117677

    ISBN
  • 129 mm

    Width
  • 198 mm

    Height
  • 219 gram

    Weight
  • NEW

    Edition
  • PAPERBACK

    Binding
  • 14 OCTOBER 2000

    Publish Date
  • 15 mm

    Spine Width

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    Description

    Now Filmed as 1947, a motion picture by Deepa Mehta. Few novels have caught the turmoil of the Indian subcontinent during Partition with such immediacy, such wit and tragic power. Bapsi Sidhwa’s lce-Candy-Man is an intimate glimpse into events as they tear apart the world of Lenny, a young Parsee girl growing up in the pungent, busybodying city of Lahore. Paperback , 277 pages Published October 1st 1989 by Penguin Books India (first published October 1st 1988)

    About the Author

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    Bapsi Sidhwa

    Bapsi Sidhwa is Pakistans leading diasporic writer. She has produced four novels in English that reflect her personal experience of the Indian subcontinents Partition, abuse against women, immigration to the US, and membership in the Parsi/Zoroastrian community. Born on August 11, 1938 in Karachi, in what is now Pakistan, and migrating shortly thereafter to Lahore, Bapsi Sidhwa witnessed the bloody Partition of the Indian Subcontinent as a young child in 1947. Growing up with polio, she was educated at home until age 15, reading extensively. She then went on to receive a BA from Kinnaird College for Women in Lahore. At nineteen, Sidhwa had married and soon after gave birth to the first of her three children. The responsibilities of a family led her to conceal her literary prowess. She says, Whenever there was a bridge game, Id sneak off and write. But now that Ive been published, a whole world has opened up for me. (Graeber) For many years, though, she says, I was told that Pakistan was too remote in time and place for Americans or the British to identify with(Hower 299). During this time she was an active womens rights spokesperson, representing Pakistan in the Asian Womens Congress of 1975.

    After receiving countless rejections for her first and second novels, The Bride and The Crow Eaters, she decided to publish The Crow Eaters in Pakistan privately. Though the experience was one she says, I would not wish on anyone, it marks the beginning of her literary fame (Sidhwa Interview 295). Since then, she has received numerous awards and honorary professorships for these first two works and her two most recent novels, Cracking India and An American Brat. These include the Pakistan National honors of the Patras Bokhri award for The Bride in 1985 and the highest honor in the arts, the Sitari-I-Imtiaz in 1991. Her third novel, Cracking India was awarded the German Literaturepreis and a nomination for Notable Book of the Year from the American Library Association, an

    Rating & Reviews

    3.8

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