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The Sound of Water

The Sound of Water
A Novel  
This edition: eBook, 224 pages
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Description


Longlisted for the 2007 Man Asian Prize, a gripping debut novel about an Indian mining disaster as seen from the perspectives of the miners, their families, and the officials charged with rescuing them.

Written by a former director of the Indian Ministry of Coal, and loosely based on the disastrous flood at the Bagdihi colliery in 2001, which trapped and killed dozens of miners, The Sound of Water is written with both an insider's authority and rare literary style. Its suspenseful narrative is presented from three perspectives: The old miner struggling to save himself and his coworkers hundreds of feet below the surface of the earth; the company and government officials charged with managing the rescue efforts, but who are seemingly far more concerned with managing their careers; and, finally, the miners' families, who stand to gain life-changing sums as a consequence of their losses.

A searing fictional exposÉ of the appalling conditions that Indian miners endure and a moving story of the spiritual strength and conviction that enables one to survive against the odds, The Sound of Water dares to inaugurate "alternate realism," a fresh genre very different from the soul-baring autobiographies and epic family sagas that have characterized so much of recent Indian fiction.

How did you come to write this book?

Many monsoons ago a friend informed me about an online writing contest. I had to write out 2500 words. I had a cause and also an excuse. I could avoid it no longer. So one evening, in a state of inebriated abandon, I sat down and wrote. The contest organizers placed my piece on their website among the 20 "best" entries from the 1000 odd they had received but I didn't get the prize. I guess I am vindictive. So I wrote more. And more. My thoughts chased the first 2500 words across sulky keyboards, ideawhite screens and fontblack sheets of paper till they became hot, caught fire and exploded with a bang. I called that sound: The Sound of Water.

Learn more about Sanjay Bahadur
"This book should be made required reading for every bureaucrat, politician and schoolchild in this country."
-- India Today
"Long-listed for the 2007 Man Asian Prize, this revealing, moving and well-written debut offers a dramatic, engaging lens through which to view an endlessly complex country."
-- Kirkus
1888PressRelease, October 29, 2009
...Sound of Water narrates an actual an Indian mining disaster from different perspectives of the miners, their families, and the officials charged with rescuing them, in light of fiction. The entire ...
The Hindu, January 8, 2009
... Delhiite Sanjay Bahadur talks to SANGEETA BAROOAH PISHAROTY about his debut book The Sound of Water, long-listed for the Man Asian Literary Prize 2007 Photo: Shanker Chakravarty Experiences make a man, they ...