The Way You Want to Be Loved: Short Stories

Aruni Kashyap
4.33
12 ratings 1 reviews
“Kashyap’s stories are a powerful and important contribution to world literature.”— The Rumpus A collection of poignant, finely crafted stories set against the backdrop of violence that has long racked north-eastern India.”— Amitav Ghosh “Daring and surprising, the must-read of our times.” — Rigoberto González “A book of ferocious inquiry and vast heart, delightful formal play and intellectual agility, The Way You Want to Be Loved asks how we can bear to live with the distances that make and unmake us”— Megha Majumdar, NYT bestselling author of A Burning At a New Delhi conference, an Assamese writer is interrogated on why he writes about magical folktales instead of the insurgencies. A mother splashes around in the village lake to mask the lovemaking sounds of her son with another man. A newly-arrived graduate student in Minnesota navigates living arrangements with his white roommate, Mike, and Mike’s Indian girlfriend. In agile and frank prose, The Way You Want to Be Loved tells the stories of queer, displaced lives from India’s Northeast, an underrepresented region in English fiction. A hybrid cast of characters represents the common people in these thirteen stories, whether western-trained academic or village sorcerer, army soldier or local politician, homeward-bound son or dutiful daughter-in-law. They wrestle with diasporic melancholia, the social pressures of familial duty, and the search for their own personhood, even as they live in a world where personhood is continually compromised and reshaped under oppressive forces larger than themselves. Aruni Kashyap offers up a powerful critique of the malfunctioning democracies of India and the US, deftly balancing devastation and tragedy with a darkly humorous tone that has readers questioning their laughter. At its core, The Way You Want to Be Loved explores what it means to love, desire, and long for life under the duress of everyday and state-sanctioned violence and discrimination. “This masterful collection mixes Chekovian realism with Borgesian magic to create a new and vital literary voice for our times. ”— Nathan Oates, author of A Flaw in the Design “A new voice in the burgeoning oeuvre of anglophone fiction from northeast India."— World Literature Today “...prose is restrained, expressive, and unflinching, capable of capturing the delicate nuances of human emotion and the brutality of injustice.”— Shelf Awareness
Genres: Short StoriesFictionIndia
256 Pages

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