Want create site? Find Free WordPress Themes and plugins.

By: Dr. Daniela Rogobete

Dr. Ratan Bhattacharjee, the prolific writer in three languages as a poet, academician, and columnist has come out for the first time as a South Asian short story writer on Covid -19 from Author House, a renowned publisher in the USA with his new book Six Feet Distance: Looking Down to Lockdown which is a wonderful collection of 37 short stories on the pandemic days. As Dr. Elisabetta Marino, from the University of Rome wrote in the Introduction to the book, “His Six Feet Distance is a powerful collection of short stories which may prove a useful tool to overcome the challenges of the present crisis. Humour, even dark humour, can help us deflate the feeling of disempowerment we are all experiencing.” Return nurturing Mother Nature in search of momentary solace is the subject of “A Truthful Lie,” which reminds us of Thoreau’s well-known social experiment on Walden pond, which the writer himself mentioned in the narrative. The author who is an author of several books in British and American literature shows his deep and outstanding knowledge in many other stories. In “Corona Caliban in Bermuda,” for instance, references to Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe, Shakespeare’s The Tempest, and Coleridge’s “Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner” complicate the plot, which beautifully gives us the feelings of isolation and loneliness we are all sharing in the Pandemic days.

Finally, money, property, or real estate have no value when life is at stake for man on the whole globe. This bears a deep philosophical stoicism. Interestingly, Dr. Bhattacharjee has focused correctly on the activity of the creative mind in the lockdown days and this happened even in earlier times when Europe faced the onslaughts of Plague. Shakespeare’s creative genius during lockdown is the subject of “Shakespeare in lockdown,” which ends the collection, as an invitation to be as creative as possible, notwithstanding our toils and tribulations. Wordsworth’s daffodils are cited in “My Fourteen Days in Hospital,” as a positive replacement for pensive recollection. The artist also devotes some of his most poignant reflections to the animal world. In “Pet Dog Guni in Lockdown,” a dog becomes as sensitive to the lockdown situation as his owners are, thus highlighting the connection between all living creatures; in “Samadrita and His Cat Billu,” the support and consolation offered by pets are also underlined. Here the evil effects of digital addiction in the mind of the children are also exhibited. In this narrative, the cooking maid of an affluent family surprisingly continues to receive her salary, despite her absence from work; solidarity, commonality, thankfulness for the smaller and bigger blessings in our lives are the gifts that the author bestows on his readers, through the stories in the collection.

America based academician Dr Nandini Bhattacharya of Texas A&M University USA praised Dr. Ratan Bhattacharjee’s remarkable collection of stories, Six Feet Distance, which she regards as a call to action for India’s masses. The stories in this book are basically an eloquent South Asian response to the Corona Virus lockdown days. While it is energized by a seeming foregrounding of the Indian political scenario generated by the Covid-19 crisis alone, that mise-en-scene also strikingly brings to light far-reaching, long-simmering, and well-justified discontents that have marked the course of the twenty-first century in India and worldwide, given the global rise of demagogues and their extremist backdrops. Along with narrating these discontents as they manifest themselves in the lives of women, queer, trans-, working-class, and other dispossessed and displaced populations in several incisive, sensitive, and variegated tales, Engaging, compelling, and above all, timely, the stories in this collection chronicling the time of Covid-19 will leave an indelible impression on readers as the stories demonstrate and refuse being pushed aside, being confined within a state of internalized lockdown that is as economic, emotional, psychological as it is physical due to Covid.

The writer focuses on the agony of the common person from the viewpoint of a man dwelling in Kolkata. In story after the story, there are flashes of humour deftly blended in with the poignant narration of the precarious lives of the old, women, children, and the disabled, to name a few. The stories also graphically describe the plight of migrant labourers who lost their children and members of their families during the draconian and imperturbable lockdown, amounting to nothing less than democide, imposed in the early days of the pandemic in India by the government at the same time on the atrocious corruption and greed of profiteering businessmen and undeterred by human suffering. The 2020 pandemic has changed our lives and the world in innumerable ways. Some of these experiences will be forgotten as too intolerable; others will be suppressed as too shameful, but the stories in Six Feet Distance will keep readers submerged and engaged in a ludic reverie. “It is a highly recommended read as a chronicle of our times,” as Dr. Nandini Bhattacharya wrote in her preface to the book. In the pandemic that is devastating the world since March 2020, art makes its way and brings light, and in this context, America based Dr. Dora Sales of the University of Jaumme correctly pointed out that “it is time to welcome the publication of Six Feet Distance, a thrilling and compelling collection of stories.” Written in the lockdown period, the stories flow and open up to reflections of enormous human depth, thanks to the gallery of unforgettable characters that inhabit them, showing the committed view of the author. Ratan Bhattacharjee’s narrative endeavor is a gift to all of us who have felt confusion and disruption due to this situation of global reach but an intimate experience.

When there has been a steep rise in reported cases of mental health problems and resultant deaths too. COVID 19 in this traumatic period of human history, literature that has been produced by several creative minds will stand as a testimony of our collective experience across the globe. Ratan Bhattacharjee’s Six Feet Distance: Looking Back to Lockdown Days as Assam based Dr. Payel Datta Chowdhury, Director of Humanities in Reva University feels it “is one such timely anthology of illuminating and heart-rendering narratives that record how human lives have been radically transformed with the Corona Virus still creating havoc in our lives. The story “Euphoria and Disillusionment”, emphasizing the sudden demand for sanitizers and masks and the resultant shortage, will definitely ring a bell with all readers. In “Merits of Mask”, the author looks beyond the superficial meaning of ‘masks’ which we are accustomed to these days and questions the veiled nature of people that we find so difficult to understand. The book brings out varied experiences of lockdown and the pandemic.

The faint hope of coming out of the catastrophe disappears with the infection curve becoming larger day by day and with the fear of coming second and third wave all these giving the book a visionary quality. The invention of vaccines took a mysterious turn at a point in time and people lost hope of survival. He wanted to fictionalize the horrible agony and frustration that prevailed. Finally, it may be concluded that this is the first book of its kind on Lockdown days which can be counted as a significant South Asian response published from abroad. (The author is an Associate Professor of University of Craiova and can be reached at [email protected])

Did you find apk for android? You can find new Free Android Games and apps.