THE LIVES WE HAVE LOST

Author:

Manjushree Thapa

Publisher:

ALEPH BOOK COMPANY

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Publisher

ALEPH BOOK COMPANY

Publication Year 2013
ISBN-13

9789382277521

ISBN-10 9789382277521
Binding

Paperback

Number of Pages 288 Pages
Language (English)
Dimensions (Cms) 20.3 x 25.4 x 4.7
Weight (grms) 217

The Constituent Assembly of Nepal, in its very first meeting, abolished the monarchy in May 2008. After that watershed event, however, the way forward has been stalled by vexing questions. How is power in such a fractious polity to be shared? Which form of governance is best suited to the country: republicanism? federalism? How are the excesses of the decade-long civil war to be reckoned? How is the People’s Liberation Army to be integrated with the Nepal Army? To what extent should neighbours be allowed to interfere in the internal politics of the nation? And why is it that the Constituent Assembly, years after it was elected, cannot draft a Constitution that is acceptable to all?


In The Lives We Have Lost, Manjushree Thapa asks these vital questions, and many others. And, in seeking answers, finds the nation still muddling its way from crisis to crisis, in desperate search of a centre that will hold.


 



  • This revised and updated edition of The Lives We Have Lost brings the account of contemporary Nepal narrated in Forget Kathmandu up to the present day.

  • A clear-sighted, relevant chronicle, it spans many important events: the Maobadis’s People’s War, King Gyanendra’s coup, his overthrow, the launch of a peace process and the—glacially slow—process of writing a new Constitution and re-fashioning the nation.

  • Manjushree Thapa is a very well-known as one of South Asia’s most sensitive, sophisticated and politically engaged authors.

  • Manjushree Thapa’s body of work, fiction and non-fiction, has created its own, significant, space in South Asian literature.

  • The Lives We Have Lost, and other books in Manjushree Thapa’s backlist, has been attractively repackaged and refreshed by Aleph Book Company.

  • A brand-new novel by the author, All of Us in Our Own Lives, is forthcoming from Aleph Book Company

Manjushree Thapa

Manjushree Thapa grew up in Nepal, Canada and the United States. She began to write upon completing her BFA in photography at the Rhode Island School of Design. Her first book was Mustang Bhot in Fragments (1992). In 2001 she published the novel The Tutor of History, which she had begun as her MFA thesis in the creative writing program at the University of Washington in Seattle, which she attended as a Fulbright scholar. Her translation of Indra Bahadur Rai's there’s a Carnival Today won 2017 PEN America Heim Translation Grant. Her best known book is Forget Kathmandu: An Elegy for Democracy (2005), published just weeks before the royal coup in Nepal on 1 February 2005. The book was shortlisted for the Lettre Ulysses Award in 2006. After the publication of the book, Thapa left the country to write against the coup. In 2007 she published a short story collection, Tilled Earth. In 2009 she published a biography of a Nepali environmentalist: A Boy from Siklis: The Life and Times of Chandra Gurung. The following year she published a novel, Seasons of Flight. In 2011 she published a nonfiction collection, The Lives We Have Lost: Essays and Opinions on Nepal. Her latest book, published in South Asia in 2016, is a novel, All Of Us in Our Own Lives. She has also contributed op-eds to the New York Times.
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