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Shashi Deshpande

    1 janvier 1938

    Shashi Deshpande est reconnue pour ses récits captivants qui explorent souvent la vie intérieure complexe des femmes et leur place dans la société. Son œuvre se caractérise par une perspicacité psychologique pénétrante et des portraits de personnages nuancés. Deshpande tisse magistralement des thèmes d'identité, de famille et d'attentes sociales, créant des histoires qui résonnent auprès des lecteurs par leur honnêteté et leur profondeur. Sa prose est réputée pour sa qualité lyrique et sa capacité à capturer l'essence de l'expérience humaine.

    Der schlafende Tiger
    Die Last des Schweigens
    Das Dunkel birgt keine Schrecken
    In the Country of Deceit
    Small Remedies
    • In the Country of Deceit

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture

      Devayani chooses to live alone in the small town of Rajnur after her parents’ death, ignoring the gently voiced disapproval of her family and friends. Teaching English, creating a garden and making friends with Rani, a former actress who settles in the town with her husband and three children, Devayani’s life is tranquil, imbued with a hard-won independence. Then she meets Ashok Chinappa, Rajnur’s new District Superintendent of Police, and they fall in love despite the fact that Ashok is much older, married, and—as both painfully acknowledge from the very beginning—it is a relationship without a future. Deshpande’s unflinching gaze tracks the suffering, evasions and lies that overtake those caught in the web of subterfuge. There are no hostages taken in the country of deceit; no victors; only scarred lives. This understated yet compassionate examination of the nature of love, loyalty and deception establishes yet again Deshpande’s position as one of India’s most formidable writers of fiction.

      In the Country of Deceit2009
      3,7
    • Shashi Deshpande's latest novel explores the lives of two women, one obsessed with music and the other a passionate believer in Communism, who break away from their families to seek fulfilment in public life. Savitribai Indorekar, born into an orthodox Hindu family, elopes with her Muslim lover and accompanist, Ghulaam Saab, to pursue a career in music. Gentle, strong-willed Leela, on the other hand, gives her life to the Party, and to working with the factory workers of Bombay. Fifty years after these events have been set in motion, Madhu, Leela's niece, travels to Bhavanipur, Savitribai's home in her last years, to write a biography of Bai. Caught in her own despair over the loss of her only son. Madhu tries to make sense of the lives of Bai and those around her, and in doing so, seeks to find a way out of her own grief.

      Small Remedies2001
      3,9
    • Der schlafende Tiger

      • 203pages
      • 8 heures de lecture

      Indien im Jahre 1942. Die Partei Mahatma Gandhis verlangt die sofortige Freiheit Indiens. „Raus aus Indien!“, lautet die Forderung an die englische Kolonialmacht. Gandhi wird verhaftet und mit ihm viele andere. Spannend, beeindruckend und differenziert erzählt der dreizehnjährige Babu vom Erwachen des Tigers, dem gewaltlosen Widerstand des indischen Volkes im Kampf um seine Unabhängigkeit.

      Der schlafende Tiger1998