My piece in Tehelka on the controversy around the movie Sadda Haq and the ban on it by the Punjab government. Please read …
Tags: police atrocities, Punjab, Sadda Haq
My piece in Tehelka on the delay in justice for riot victims in India with special focus on the Sajjan Kumar acquittal in the Delhi riots 1984. Please read …
Tags: 1984, court, Delhi Riots, justice, Sajjan Kumar
My piece in Tehelka on the controversy around the movie Sadda Haq and the ban on it by the Punjab government. Please read …
Tags: police atrocities, Punjab, Sadda Haq
Two reviews of mine on Uday Prakash’s Walls of Delhi appeared in The Hindu, online and print editions.
Online: please read …
Print and Onine: please read …
Tags: Translation, Uday Prakash, Walls of Delhi
It is an honour to get such a glowing review in The Book Review. Thank you Nishat.
Tags: 1984, Bluestar, Khalistan, military school, Mrs. Gandhi, Punjab, riots, Roll of Honour
Daman is a friend and a fellow writer but I did not know she was reviewing Roll of Honour in Asian Age.
‘Roll of Honour is an important work for it sets out to explore dark spaces in time and place and forbidden recesses of the mind. … Written as a fictionalised memoir, Roll of Honour is completely credible. While it may not answer all the questions that it raises, it certainly forces the reader to face them. These questions are both personal and political. Amandeep Sandhu has a remarkable command over the art of personal narrative. He writes with startling honesty and with searing intensity.’
Tags: 1984, Bluestar, Khalistan, military school, Mrs. Gandhi, Punjab, riots, Roll of Honour
Varad Sharma highlights the tone of the book by selecting certain important instances of thought in his review. Thanks Varad.
‘Roll of Honour questions the authoritative power. It is about different identities an individual takes in different phases of life on the basis of colour, religion, community, language, and nation. The author is blunt in describing the events and the experiences (and even the abuses). … One should read this novel to get an insight about what the youth went through during troubled times in Punjab.’
The same review appeared at The New Indian Express
Tags: 1984, Bluestar, Khalistan, military school, Mrs. Gandhi, Punjab, riots, Roll of Honour
I remain grateful to reviewers and interviewers who discern and glean out thoughts worthy of sharing in their pieces. After her excellent review Reshmy follows it up with this interview in which I manage to surprise myself. Read on.
Tags: 1984, Bluestar, Khalistan, military school, Mrs. Gandhi, Punjab, riots, Roll of Honour
What does a writer say when a reviewer born in Bhopal in 1983 confesses that, ‘The eyes still haunt me and I am perpetually running away from certain realities in the embezzlement of fiction that may touch base human emotions but doesn’t touch human suffering at the hands of fellow countrymen. … When Amandeep Sandhu asked me to read his second book for my views as a reader I knew if I say a yes, it would be my test too. A test if the adventurous reader has the guts too.’
Then she says this on the book. I feel humbled. Please read …
Tags: 1984, Bluestar, Khalistan, military school, Mrs. Gandhi, Punjab, riots, Roll of Honour
Friends, last December I was surprised by the cold wave in Calcutta. That is when, through Julia Dutta, I met Dipali Taneja. I was hungry, blown by the cold. The evening conversation with excellent kebabs and continental food at Dipali’s gave me strength and I came away knowing I had made a new friend.
This is the Child Sexual Abuse Awareness month and suddenly Dipali asked me for an interview. I just now got the blog entry from her and am so pleased to see how she read Roll of Honour and has structured her entry. Over the past few months many readers have brought such a variety of readings to the book, Dipali sees it as a book against child sex abuse and I feel so satisfied that she sees it like that. Towards the end of the interview I have made a request to all of us readers. Read on… Thank you Dipali.
Tags: 1984, Bluestar, Khalistan, male CSA, military school, Mrs. Gandhi, Punjab, riots, Roll of Honour
Friends, this is another proud coverage. Though the book has been very well received I wanted to know how it will be accepted in Punjab. Prof Manju Jaidka invited me to speak at the Punjab University Department of English under the aegis of the Sahitya Academy. Parul Bajaj covered the event even without me knowing about it. Now that is a nice surprise. Please read on.
Tags: 1984, Bluestar, Khalistan, military school, Mrs. Gandhi, Punjab, riots, Roll of Honour