Ramakant's Pillow

Aug 27 2007  | Views 1664 |  Comments  (21)
Press Trust of India Friday, August 24, 2007 (Patna) Twelve more flood-related deaths were reported ... Expand

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  katokatha posted 2 mnths ago

Congratulations.
this story narrates the plight and misery of these rural people very well alongwith the callousness of authorities. A very well written story. Also it is a sort of black humour and well reveals the idiosyncrasies of people only too well.
Best wishes,
Katokatha



  Sablu posted 2 mnths ago

Congratulation to you for your marvellous achievement.

Liked reading your blogs very much



  RJoshi06 posted 2 mnths ago

Congrats on making it to the winner list!
Rutuja



  RJoshi06 posted 11 mnths ago

Hi,
Gripping narration. Great description.....but sad.....probably realistic..but...
Heartiest Congratulations.
Rutuja



  Revathi Seshadri posted 11 mnths ago

Cant afford to let Ramakant die.  Please write a sequel to say that he was miraculously saved and was reunited with his family and of course his pillow. The dig on journalists and the socalled educated are really good.
Congratulations.
Revathi Seshadri.



  chrisanne posted 11 mnths ago

Congrats
Great story....... Cheers Chris



  GCANPADEE posted 11 mnths ago

Enjoyable Hinglish phrases.
A touching ending!
 
g-canpadee.sulekha.com



  Sandeep Shete posted 11 mnths ago

Hi Saliloquy,
Congrats!
I liked your vivid description of the poverty and misery of India's rural underclass. Almost feels like being there. Also that  premise about pillows being reservoirs of dreams...
You might find my story "How Vishakha Became a Vegetarian" interesting. It's also partly based in a village.
Regards,
Sandeep



  confused-desi posted 11 mnths ago

Wonderful understated style, the simple acceptance of life's hardships.  Your writing has the potential to draw attention to serious social issues.  Write one a month and you could start really making an impact not just as a fiction writer but as a powerful activist.  I see a Pulitzer in the making.
 
-nb



  Nargis Natarajan posted 11 mnths ago

Hi Salil..... It was quite a gripping narration, dotted with the neccessary humour to counteract the serious situation. A very interesting point that you highlighted was the fact that knowledge is not neccessarily got only by education. It also takes common sense and reason to understand a few basic facts. What the entire village could not see, Ramakant saw. It is very unfortunate that when any calamity occurs, be it natural or man made it is mostly the lower class that suffers. Excellent story!Btw,like your handle too...interesting:-}





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