Skip to Content
Gone Away : An Indian Journal

Price:

800.00 ৳


মিনি বিশ্বকোষ পাখি
মিনি বিশ্বকোষ পাখি
750.00 ৳
750.00 ৳
Rowley Jeffersons Awesome Friendly Adventure (PB)
Rowley Jeffersons Awesome Friendly Adventure (PB)
700.00 ৳
700.00 ৳

Gone Away : An Indian Journal

https://pathakshamabesh.com/web/image/product.template/17267/image_1920?unique=f476e7e

800.00 ৳ 800.0 BDT 800.00 ৳

Not Available For Sale


This combination does not exist.

Terms and Conditions
30-day money-back guarantee
Shipping: 2-3 Business Days

 Delivery Charge (Based on Location & Book Weight)

 Inside Dhaka City: Starts from Tk. 70 (Based on book weight)

 Outside Dhaka (Anywhere in Bangladesh): Starts from Tk. 150 (Weight-wise calculation applies)

 International Delivery: Charges vary by country and book weight — will be informed after order confirmation.

 3 Days Happy ReturnChange of mind is not applicable

 Multiple Payment Methods

Credit/Debit Card, bKash, Rocket, Nagad, and Cash on Delivery also available. 

One of the most unconventional travelogues ever written, Gone Away covers three months of Dom Moraes’ life spent in the subcontinent at the time of the Chinese incursions on the Tibetan border in 1959. In that short time, a remarkable number of memorable things happened to him, some of them the sort of fantastic situations that could only enmesh a poet, perhaps only a young poet—a visit to a speak-easy in Bombay; an interview with Nehru and an hour spent closeted with the Dalai Lama in Delhi; and a meeting with the great Nepalese poet, Devkota, whom he found already laid out to die by the side of the holy river Basumati. After a short stay in Calcutta, where he tried, with limited success, to investigate the lives of prostitutes, he went up to Sikkim, the north-eastern border state into which no visiting writer had been allowed for almost a year. Having made his way by jeep right up to the frontier, he ran into a Chinese detachment and was shot at, but escaped to safety.Full of humour, felicity of phrase and oddity of behaviour, Gone Away communicates the special excitement of the traveller on every page. Unforgettably funny is the account of the Sikkimese soccer match played in an impenetrable mist and involving the loss of several footballs kicked over an adjoining cliff. Yet, though humour and irreverence prevail through the pages, this is a book which catches and holds the mood of modern India and illuminates as much as it entertains.

Dom Moraes

Dom Moraes (19 July 1938 – 2 June 2004) was an Indian writer and poet who published nearly 30 books in English language. He is widely seen as a foundational figure in Indian English literature. His poems are a meaningful and substantial contribution to Indian and World literature

Title

Gone Away : An Indian Journal

Author

Dom Moraes

Publisher

Speaking Tiger

Number of Pages

210

Language

English (US)

Category

  • Travel
  • First Published

    JAN 2020

    One of the most unconventional travelogues ever written, Gone Away covers three months of Dom Moraes’ life spent in the subcontinent at the time of the Chinese incursions on the Tibetan border in 1959. In that short time, a remarkable number of memorable things happened to him, some of them the sort of fantastic situations that could only enmesh a poet, perhaps only a young poet—a visit to a speak-easy in Bombay; an interview with Nehru and an hour spent closeted with the Dalai Lama in Delhi; and a meeting with the great Nepalese poet, Devkota, whom he found already laid out to die by the side of the holy river Basumati. After a short stay in Calcutta, where he tried, with limited success, to investigate the lives of prostitutes, he went up to Sikkim, the north-eastern border state into which no visiting writer had been allowed for almost a year. Having made his way by jeep right up to the frontier, he ran into a Chinese detachment and was shot at, but escaped to safety.Full of humour, felicity of phrase and oddity of behaviour, Gone Away communicates the special excitement of the traveller on every page. Unforgettably funny is the account of the Sikkimese soccer match played in an impenetrable mist and involving the loss of several footballs kicked over an adjoining cliff. Yet, though humour and irreverence prevail through the pages, this is a book which catches and holds the mood of modern India and illuminates as much as it entertains.
    No Specifications