The Crow Eaters

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The Crow Eaters
The Crow Eaters 1978.jpg
Cover of 1st edition, 1978
Author Bapsi Sidhwa
PublisherILMI Printing Press
Publication date
1978
Awards Big Jubilee Read

The Crow Eaters is a 1978 comic novel by Bapsi Sidhwa. [1] The novel is about a Parsi family. [1] The book was Sidhwa's debut novel. [2] [3]

Sidhwa said in a 2012 interview that she was "still delighted" with the novel and regularly found passages of the book " ... that still make me laugh out loud. I remember laughing a lot as I was writing the book and being in a very good humour, for the most part". [1] The BBC described the book in 2022 as "Wickedly funny and searingly honest [and] a vibrant portrait of a Parsi family taking its place in colonial India on the brink of the 20th century". [4]

It was initially self-published in English in 1978. In 1980, it was published by Sangam Books of Mumbai, India and by Cape in London ( ISBN   9780224018500). It has been republished several times including in 2015 by Daunt ( ISBN   9781907970610). It was translated into Urdu in 2012 by Muhammad Umar Memon. [1]

The novel attracted a hostile reception in Pakistan upon publication in 1982 due to its depiction of Parsis. [1] In a 2012 interview Sidhwa recalled that The Crow Eaters received a warmer reception in Pakistan after the novel was well received by British reviewers. [1] Sidhwa recalled that "A lot of Parsis were offended ... It was the first novel ever written about the Parsis, and the community was not accustomed to seeing themselves fictionalised or made fun of. They certainly accept and love the book now". [1]

A bomb scare at the Intercontinental Hotel accompanied the publication of the book in Lahore. [1]

The book was included in the Big Jubilee Read to celebrate the Platinum Jubilee of Elizabeth II in 2022. [4]

Plot

The book is about a Parsi family, the Junglewallas, in pre-partition India and their move from central India to the city of Lahore. [5] [2] [4] The book opens with the death of the family patriarch, businessman Fareedon Junglewalla. [1] Fareedon's conflicts with his mother-in-law provide many of the novel's comic scenes. [1] [2]

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Asif Farrukhi (14 July 2012). "Review of the Crow Eaters in Urdu". Dawn . Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  2. 1 2 3 Oh, Seiwoong (22 April 2015). Encyclopedia of Asian-American literature. New York. p. 703. ISBN   978-1-4381-4058-2. OCLC   882543312.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. Skinner, John (18 September 1998). The Stepmother Tongue : An Introduction to New Anglophone Fiction. Bloomsbury. p. 64. ISBN   978-1-349-26898-6. OCLC   1086529598.
  4. 1 2 3 "The Big Jubilee Read - 1972-1981". BBC . Retrieved 22 April 2022.
  5. Allen, Diane S. (1994). "Reading the Body Politic in Bapsi Sidhwa's Novels: The Crow Eaters, Ice-Candy Man and An American Brat". South Asian Review . Informa UK Limited. 18 (15): 69–80. doi:10.1080/02759527.1994.11932171. ISSN   0275-9527.