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Jun 06, 2025 09:50AM

 
The Heaven & Eart...
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Book cover for Betty
In my mind, she was the girl born on a staircase who then became a woman torn between taking a step up into the light or a step down into the dark.
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Pallavi Aiyar
“Unlike other methods of repair, like welding or glueing, kintsugi’s power was in its refusal to disguise the brokenness of an object, he said. It did not aim to make what was broken as good as new, but to use the cracks to transform the object into something different, and arguably even more valuable.”
Pallavi Aiyar, Orienting: An Indian in Japan

“I could either abandon the doubts I beheld and be free, or else dwell in the eye of the prejudiced, to be chained there. There are too many enemies in life to be one of yourself.”
Tiffany McDaniel, Betty

Pallavi Aiyar
“That toilets in Japan were objets d’art has already been established. But their true awesomeness lay not in their gadgetry so much as in their cleanliness and easy availability. As a woman on the move, a decent toilet was manna. We had smaller bladders than men, we had monthly periods, and those of us who had given birth had urinary tracts that were as capricious in the timing of their needs as the annual blooming of the cherry blossoms. The simple fact of being able to use a toilet with confidence in public spaces � parks, metro stations, highway pit stops � enhanced the quality of life enough to make toilets my number one favourite thing about Japan.”
Pallavi Aiyar, Orienting: An Indian in Japan

Pallavi Aiyar
“OK, so more fascinating discoveries. This one thanks to Yujiro Hashi. There was a time when the Japanese equivalent for ‘the whole world� was ‘the three countries.� So, instead of saying ‘You are the most beautiful person in the whole world,� they would have said, ‘You are the most beautiful person in the three countries,� although the import would be the same. The fascinating part is that the three countries referred to are Japan itself, China and India. That was the whole world according to the Japanese mental map of the time. The phrase (now antiquated) is: san goku ichi no xxx, i.e. ‘the best xxx in the three countries (whole world). San goku ichi no hana-yom or the most beautiful bride in the world, is an expression still used at weddings.”
Pallavi Aiyar, Orienting: An Indian in Japan

Anuk Arudpragasam
“the story of Kuttimani’s death told in the seventh chapter is based on Rajan Hoole’s account in The Arrogance of Power: Myths, Decadence, and Murder; the documentary described in chapter nine is Beate Arnestad and Morten Daae’s My Daughter the Terrorist; the account in chapter nine of Buddhist women’s poetry is based on a translation from the Pali by Charles Hallisey.”
Anuk Arudpragasam, A Passage North

25x33 Indian English Authors — 625 members — last activity Oct 23, 2024 12:53AM
This is about the Indian Authors and their writings. How has English writting in India reached the heights no one ever imagined.
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