Reaching Bombay Central

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Ayesha Jamal is on a train to Bombay, on a mission to resolve an unpleasant complication in her husband’s professional life that threatens to destroy everything. Uncertain, on edge, she responds to the passing world around her, to the realities of present-day India and her domestic life, with a mixture of helpless anger and desperate hope. In the compartment with her are a quintessential politician, self-important and solicitous; a no-nonsense girl, sharp and worldly-wise, who intrigues Ayesha with her easy confidence; and a young journalist, on his way to report on the recent communal riots in Bombay, in whom Ayesha expects the brashness of youth (even his sports shoes are ‘sure of their place in the world’) but who surprises her with his civility and good sense. During the course of the journey, an effortless intimacy binds the passengers in Compartment C; but Ayesha’s mind remains full of difficult questions: how long will this go on, this life where nothing is real? Can she tell her new friends the truth and be done with it? Will anything ever book beautiful again? Then, just hours before Bombay Central Station, news of a wholly unexpected event, as simple and apposite as a miracle, delivers Ayesha of all her burdens. "Written with astonishing economy, Reaching Bombay Central is an elegant and heart-warming novel. In pared down, poetic prose, Shama Futehally writes about the fears and hopes of an individual life which bring into sharp focus the larger realities of contemporary India.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR Shama Futehally

Shama Futehally’s highly acclaimed debut novel, Tara Lane, was published in 1993 and her translations of Meerabai’s songs, In the Dark of the Heart: Songs of Meera, in 1994. Her short stories have appeared in several collections, including The Inner Courtyard and In Other Words.

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Bibliographic information

Title
Reaching Bombay Central
Author
Edition
1st ed.
Publisher
ISBN
0670889636
Length
x+154p.
Subjects