Elegy for the East: A story of blood and broken dreams

Author:

Dr Dhrubajyoti Borah

Publisher:

Niyogi Books

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Publisher

Niyogi Books

Publication Year 2020
ISBN-13

9789389136661

ISBN-10 9789389136661
Binding

Paperback

Edition FIRST
Number of Pages 378 Pages
Language (English)
Dimensions (Cms) 21x14x2
Weight (grms) 420

Before the relentless march of history, the lone individual is helpless. Yet it is men whose collective efforts give history its momentum and ushers in change of eras. These changes are tempestuous at times—like a churning that brings up both nectar and scum. Elegy for the East explores the utter helplessness and travails of man in face of exactly such overwhelming odds. A narrative not far from truth, where an uncaring, anonymous, and overbearing State creates and/or co-creates situations of social and political strife, and where innocent and beautiful dreams of the masses die in the stony bed of terror and counter-terror. The sylvian countryside of Assam with its green paddy fields hide memories of bloodshed, death, rape, and terror. And through all these, the eternal narrative of man’s quest for peace and meaning shine like a beacon.


This novel is a work of fiction; the characters bear no resemblance to any person dead or alive. Yet they walked amongst us all–in flesh and blood, in thoughts and dreams. Fiction that reflects reality in a more truthful way.


A masterly work of a master storyteller.

Dr Dhrubajyoti Borah

Dr Dhrubajyoti Borah is an Indian writer who writes in Assamese and English. A brilliant novelist, he has written more than 20 novels—big and small—on various aspects of human existence. Set in the lush green valleys, steaming forests, emerald tea plantations, and rolling hills of Assam, his novels tell the stories of the youths in angst, of groups who struggle to bring about a more just society, and of women who search for true meaning of life amidst trials and tribulations. Many of his writings are viewed through the eyes of the subaltern and marginalized stratum, whose entire lives are a yearning for emancipation from social and political forces that seek to subdue them. Seeped with the essence of contemporaneous history and the historical experience of the people, Dr Borah’s exploration of postcolonial ethos and angst is masterly. His voice is urgent and genuine, with a rare universal appeal.
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