Amitav Ghosh
Amitav
Ghosh (born 1956), is an Indian-Bengali
author and literary critic known for his work
in the English language.
Ghosh was born in Kolkata and
was educated at The Doon
School (where he was a younger contemporary of
Vikram Seth); St. Stephen's College, Delhi; Delhi
University; and the University of Oxford, where he was
awarded a Ph.D. in social
anthropology.
Ghosh lives in New York with
his wife, Deborah Baker, author of the Laura Riding
biography In Extremis: The Life of Laura Riding (1993)
and a senior editor at Little, Brown and Company. In
1999, Ghosh joined the
faculty at Queens College, City University of
New York as Distinguished
Professor in Comparative Literature. He has
also been a visiting professor to the English
department of Harvard University since 2005.
Ghosh's latest
work of fiction, The Hungry
Tide, was published in April 2004. His other novels are The Circle of Reason (1986), The Shadow Lines (1990), The Calcutta
Chromosome (1995) and The Glass Palace (2000). The Shadow Lines won the Sahitya Akademi Award,
India's most prestigious literary award. The Calcutta
Chromosome won the Arthur C.
Clarke Award for 1997. Ghosh's fiction is
characterised by strong themes that may be somewhat
identified with post-colonialism but is difficult to
label. His topics are unique and personal; some of his
appeal lies in his ability to weave "Indo-nostalgic"
elements into more serious themes.
Ghosh has also
written four works of non-fiction: In an Antique Land (1992), Dancing in Cambodia, At Large in Burma (1998), Countdown (1999, on
India's nuclear policy), and The Imam and the Indian (2002, a large
collection of essays on different themes such as
fundamentalism, history of the novel, Egyptian
culture, and literature).
He lives in New
York and is currently working on a trilogy to be
published by Penguin Books
India.
Awards:
-
Sahitya
Akademi Award for Shadow Lines in 1991.
-
Aurhter
C Clarke Award in 1997 for the Calcutta
Chromosome
-
Padma
Shree by Indian Government in 2007