'...[An] intelligent and argumentative book on contemporary Indian English novels...' - Michael Wood, London Review of Books
'Khair's study is worlds away from the glossy Sunday supplements. He subjects writers and their works to a barrage of intellectual heavy artillery...Khair writes about the instrinsic, strictly technical, problems of representation that confront Indian writers of English, ever in danger of sounding parodic or patronising about non-Babu Indians.' - Alok Rai, Outlook
'...brilliant and insightful...[This book is] highly rewarding...' - Makarand Paranjape, Gentleman
'Khair is successful in his bid "to address Indian English texts without mutilating them to fit postcolonial paradigms". - Meenakshi Mukherjee, former Professor, Delhi University
'...a highly nuanced study of Indian English fiction...that takes as given the necessity to be live to local realities as well as to the international...Khair gives us interesting insights...on Indian English novel...writers and their works.' - G J V Prasad, Tehelka
'[The book has] an excellent, lucid introduction...Khair must be lauded for his intent [to] "examine Indian English fiction"...beyond and above the currents of a fashionable post-colonialism.' - Amrita Bhalla, Angles on the English-Speaking World
'...splendidly written, well researched, and balances theory and critical practice extemely well. The interweaving of literary and social motifs is also deftly accomplished.' - Terry Eagleton, Warton Professor of English Literature, Oxford University
- ISBN10 0195679032
- ISBN13 9780195679038
- Publish Date 22 December 2005 (first published 1 April 2001)
- Publish Status Active
- Out of Print 7 August 2021
- Publish Country IN
- Imprint OUP India
- Format Paperback
- Pages 424
- Language English