Bombay Stories

Saadat Hasan Manto
3.82
1,333 ratings 183 reviews
Bombay in the 1930s and 1940s reigned as the undisputed cosmopolitan capital of the Subcontinent. Bombay Stories is a collection of Manto’s work from his years in the city. Freshly arrived in 1930s Mumbai, Manto saw a city like no other—an exhilarating hub of license and liberty, and a city bursting with both creative energy and helpless despondency. It was to be Manto’s favourite city, and he was among the first to write the Bombay characters we are now familiar with from countless stories and films—prostitutes, pimps, lowlifes, writers, intellectuals, aspiring film actors, thugs, conmen and crooks. His hard-edged, moving stories remain, a hundred years after his birth, startling and provocative--in searching out those forgotten by humanity, Manto wrote about what it means to be human. Matt Reeck and Aftab Ahmad’s translations reach into the streets and capture in contemporary, idiomatic English the feeling that Urdu’s most celebrated short-story writer’s work stories provide in the original.
Genres: Short StoriesFictionIndiaClassicsIndian LiteraturePakistanLiteratureLiterary FictionPoliticsDrama
320 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
343 (26%)
4 star
533 (40%)
3 star
356 (27%)
2 star
79 (6%)
1 star
22 (2%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Saadat Hasan Manto

Lists with this book

Born Confused
Interpreter of Maladies
The Contract
Desi Chick Lit (fiction)
254 books • 346 voters
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
'Best Curl Up In Bed And Re-Read Books!
409 books • 86 voters
The Poisonwood Bible
Things Fall Apart
Waiting for Godot
Unaccustomed Earth
Untouchable
Anu: The Nomad Years
Syllabus for Indian Youth
68 books • 7 voters