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Janice Pariat
Indian poet and writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Janice Pariat is an Indian poet and writer. She was born in Assam and grew up in Shillong, Meghalaya.[1][2]
Boats on Land (Random House India, 2012),[3] her debut collection of short stories, won the 2013 Sahitya Akademi Young Writer Award for the English language[4] and the 2013 Crossword Book Award for fiction.[5] Pariat is the first writer from Meghalaya to receive an award from the Sahitya Akademi for a work in English.[2]
Janice bagged the Sushila Devi Award[6] for her latest book 'Everything the light touches' for best fiction 2023.
Her latest book 'Everyrhing light touches ' was long listed for JCB Prize for Literature 2023.[7]
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Early life and career
Pariat was born in Jorhat, Assam, and grew up between Shillong and several tea estates in Assam.[1][2] She was educated at Loreto Convent, Shillong and The Assam Valley School.[1][8] Thereafter she obtained a BA in English Literature from St. Stephen's College, Delhi and an MA in History of Art and/or Archaeology from SOAS, University of London.[1]
She is the editor of online literary journal Pyrta, which she founded in 2010.[9] Her writing has featured in a number of Indian and international magazines,[10] such as Time Out Delhi,[1] The Caravan[11] and Internazionale.[12] Pariat teaches Creative Writing and History of Art at Ashoka University.
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Awards and honours
In 2013, Pariat's debut collection of short stories Boats on Land won the Sahitya Akademi Young Writer Award for the English language,[4] and a Crossword Book Award (fiction).[13] The same work was also shortlisted for the 2013 Shakti Bhatt First Book Prize,[14] and longlisted for the 2013 uday lakhanpal International Short Story Award[15][16] and the 2013 Tata Literature Live! First Book Award.[17] Seahorse was shortlisted for The Hindu Literary Prize (2015).[18]
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Style
In Boats on Land, Pariat's stories – set between Shillong, Cherrapunji and Assam – undertake fictional re-imaginings of the transformations that swept through Northeast India during a period of three centuries, starting in the 1850s.[19] Weaving together local folklore and tradition with unfolding social and political events, Pariat's style has been likened to magical realism[20] as well as to Haruki Murakami's writing.[21] Jeet Thayil commented on her stories to be 'revelatory and original'.[20]
Bibliography
Fiction
- Everything the Light Touches, HarperCollins, 2022. ISBN 0063210045
- The Nine-Chambered Heart, HarperCollins India, New Delhi, 2017. ISBN 978-93-5277-379-4
- Seahorse: A novel, Random House India, New Delhi, 2014. ISBN 978-8-184-00668-1
- Boats on Land: A collection of short stories, Random House India, New Delhi, 2012. ISBN 978-8-184-00074-0
Poetry
- The Yellow Nib Modern English Poetry by Indians (Sudeep Sen ed.), Seamus Heaney Centre for Poetry, Queen's University Belfast, 2011 .
- Kavi Kala: The Visual Poetry Project (Madness Manali ed.), Cinnamon Teal Print and Publishing, Goa, 2010. ISBN 978-93-80151-79-3
Anthology
- We Come From Mist: Writings from Meghalaya, Zubaan, New Delhi, 2023. ISBN 978-9-390-51426-7
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See also
Gallery
- Pariat at a book launch in October 2012
- Chandigarh Literature Festival 2016
- Chandigarh Literature Festival 2016
References
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