Rupa Bajwa

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Rupa Bajwa
Language English
Notable award(s)

Long listed for the Orange Prize for Fiction in 2004. The XXIV Grinzane Cavour Prize for best first novel in June 2005. The Commonwealth Award in 2005.

India's Sahitya Akademi Award English 2006.
Children 1
Relative(s) [1]

Rupa Bajwa is an Indian writer who lives and works in Amritsar, Punjab.

In 2004, she published her first novel, The Sari Shop, which explores her hometown and the class dynamics of India.[2] The novel won the writer flattering reviews, with reviewers calling her India’s new literary find. The Sari Shop was long listed for the Orange Prize for Fiction in 2004. The novel won the XXIV Grinzane Cavour Prize for best first novel in June 2005, the Commonwealth Award in 2005 and India's Sahitya Akademi Award English 2006.

The Sari Shop has been translated in several languages, among them: French ( Le vendeur de saris), Dutch (De Sariwinkel) and Serbian (Prodavnica sarija).

Though she is from a Sikh family, Bajwa wrote a controversial piece called "Dark Things Do Happen in Gurdwaras Sometimes", in The Daily Telegraph, an Indian newspaper.[3] This piece brought her immense criticism and hate mail from the Sikh clergy.

Rupa Bajwa also writes book reviews and articles on other interests in The Telegraph, The Tribune and India Today.

Rupa Bajwa's second novel 'Tell Me a Story' was released in April 2012. It was met with extreme reactions. It received critical appreciation from some quarters, at the same time creating controversy among the 'literary circles' in New Delhi, since a part of this novel lampooned these very people.

Currently, Rupa Bajwa is working on her third novel and she intends to write as long as she lives.[4][5][6]

References

  1. influences =
  2. Sood, Ashima. "THE EMIGRANT AND THE NATIVE: the Indias of Akhil Sharma and Rupa Bajwa". Another Subcontitent. Retrieved January 3, 2012. 
  3. Bajwa, Rupa (February 6, 2005). "Dark Things Do Happen in Gurdwaras Sometimes". Sikh Times. Retrieved January 3, 2012. 
  4. Singh, Roopinder (May 22, 2004). "Write recipe". The Tribune. Retrieved January 3, 2012. 
  5. http://www.dnaindia.com/lifestyle/review_book-review-tell-me-a-story_1682029
  6. http://www.thehindu.com/arts/books/article3483287.ece

<Review: Tell me a story « readiscover >The Hindu : Arts / Books : A voice of her own> <When Amritsar meets Delhi - The Sunday Tribune - Spectrum>


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