Bangladeshi writing in English

FICTION / Residence

I plead but I know there is nothing I can do. Akbar, in a rare fit of courage, tries to intervene. But the old man does not budge. Maybe he knows about Mina and me.

POETRY / What to do when faced with tear bombs

Hold on to the hand of your lover. Because when the baton falls it will be between the spaces where we stand.

POETRY / Silent friday

Somehow, the taste of tear gas

BOOK REVIEW: NONFICTION / 'Thrice born': The journey of Bangladeshi literature in English

Bangladeshi Literature in English: Critical Essays and Interviews, edited by Mohammad A. Quayum and Md. Mahmudul Hasan, focuses on critical essays on Bangladeshi literature in English—both from Bangladesh and its diasporas (US, UK, and Australia).

POETRY / Survival tactics for “peaceful” protests

Stay in a group, never in alleyways

POETRY / Look out the windows

In the blanks of muddy moonlight

POETRY / Magic boys and girls of Bangladesh

Magic boys and girls of Bangladesh, I love you.

ESSAY / Manufacturing praise

Sometime ago, a writer reached out to me with a request. His debut novel was being published later in the year and he was wondering if I would be open to reviewing it. I was aware of the book, having read it when it was still only a draft. The author was not someone I only knew, either, but a mentor who had supported my writing in many ways, even through monetary means. Refusing him, then, felt tantamount to betrayal. But I had to in the end, and though he understood, I still came out of the exchange feeling guilty of being unhelpful or, worse, ungrateful.

A case for funding the Bangladeshi English-writing scene

If the country’s literary potential is not given generous support, we may never create favourable conditions for aspiring writers to devote time and energy to the art

September 14, 2024
September 14, 2024

Residence

I plead but I know there is nothing I can do. Akbar, in a rare fit of courage, tries to intervene. But the old man does not budge. Maybe he knows about Mina and me.

September 7, 2024
September 7, 2024

Silent friday

Somehow, the taste of tear gas

September 7, 2024
September 7, 2024

What to do when faced with tear bombs

Hold on to the hand of your lover. Because when the baton falls it will be between the spaces where we stand.

September 5, 2024
September 5, 2024

'Thrice born': The journey of Bangladeshi literature in English

Bangladeshi Literature in English: Critical Essays and Interviews, edited by Mohammad A. Quayum and Md. Mahmudul Hasan, focuses on critical essays on Bangladeshi literature in English—both from Bangladesh and its diasporas (US, UK, and Australia).

August 31, 2024
August 31, 2024

Survival tactics for “peaceful” protests

Stay in a group, never in alleyways

August 24, 2024
August 24, 2024

Magic boys and girls of Bangladesh

Magic boys and girls of Bangladesh, I love you.

August 24, 2024
August 24, 2024

Look out the windows

In the blanks of muddy moonlight

August 22, 2024
August 22, 2024

Manufacturing praise

Sometime ago, a writer reached out to me with a request. His debut novel was being published later in the year and he was wondering if I would be open to reviewing it. I was aware of the book, having read it when it was still only a draft. The author was not someone I only knew, either, but a mentor who had supported my writing in many ways, even through monetary means. Refusing him, then, felt tantamount to betrayal. But I had to in the end, and though he understood, I still came out of the exchange feeling guilty of being unhelpful or, worse, ungrateful.

March 27, 2024
March 27, 2024

A case for funding the Bangladeshi English-writing scene

If the country’s literary potential is not given generous support, we may never create favourable conditions for aspiring writers to devote time and energy to the art

September 28, 2023
September 28, 2023

What you call your own

As an Anglophone writer in Bangladesh, I’ve frequently faced the rather inane question of why I write in English.