Search
Log in
  • Home

  • Categories

  • Audiobooks

  • E-books

  • For kids

  • Top lists

  • Help

  • Download app

  • Use campaign code

  • Redeem gift card

  • Try free now
  • Log in
  • Language

    🇫🇮 Suomi

    • FI
    • EN

    🇧🇪 Belgique

    • FR
    • EN

    🇩🇰 Danmark

    • DK
    • EN

    🇩🇪 Deutschland

    • DE
    • EN

    🇪🇸 España

    • ES
    • EN

    🇫🇷 France

    • FR
    • EN

    🇳🇱 Nederland

    • NL
    • EN

    🇳🇴 Norge

    • NO
    • EN

    🇦🇹 Österreich

    • AT
    • EN

    🇨🇭 Schweiz

    • DE
    • EN

    🇸🇪 Sverige

    • SE
    • EN
  1. Books
  2. Essays and reportage
  3. Essays

Read and listen for free for 14 days!

Cancel anytime

Try free now
0.0(0)

My Country Is Literature : Adventures in the Reading Life

'A book is only one text, but it is many books. It is a different book for each of its readers. My Anna Karenina is not your Anna Karenina; your A House for Mr Biswas is not the one on my shelf. When we think of a favourite book, we recall not only the shape of the story, the characters who touched our hearts, the rhythm and texture of the sentences. We recall our own circumstances when we read it: where we bought it (and for how much), what kind of joy or solace it provided, how scenes from the story began to intermingle with scenes from our life, how it roused us to anger or indignation or allowed us to make our peace with some great private discord. This is the second life of the book: its life in our life.'

In his early twenties, the novelist Chandrahas Choudhury found himself in the position of most young people who want to write: impractical, hard-up, ill at ease in the world. Like most people who love to read, his most radiant hours were inside the pages of a book. Seeking to combine his love of writing with his love of reading, he became an adept of a trade that is mainly transacted lying down—that is, he became a book reviewer.

Pleasure, independence, aesthetic rapture, even a modest livelihood: all these were the rewards of being a worker bee of literature, ingesting the output of the publishers of the world in great quantities and trying to explain in the pages of newspapers and magazines exactly what makes a book leave a mark on the soul. Even as Choudhury's own novels began to be published, he continued to write about other writers' books: his contemporaries at home and abroad, the great Indian writers of the past, the relationship of the reading life —in particular, the novel—to selfhood and democracy, all the ways in which literature sings the truths of the human heart.

My Country Is Literature brings together the best of his literary criticism: a long train of perceptive essays on writers as diverse as VS Naipaul and Orhan Pamuk, Gandhi and Nehru, Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay and Jhumpa Lahiri. The book also contains an introductory essay describing Choudhury's book-saturated years as a young writer in Mumbai, the joys and sorrows and stratagems of the book reviewer's trade, and the ways in which literature is made as much by readers as by writers.

Delightfully punctuated with 15 portraits of writers by the artist Golak Khandual, My Country Is Literature is essential reading for everyone who believes that books are the most beautiful things in life.


Author:

  • Chandrahas Choudhury

Format:

  • E-book

Duration:

  • 271 pages

Language:

English

Categories:

  • Essays and reportage
  • Essays
  • Essays and reportage
  • Anthologies
  • Culture
  • Literature

More by Chandrahas Choudhury

Skip the list
  1. Clouds : A Novel

    Chandrahas Choudhury

    book

Others have also read

Skip the list
  1. El Reinos rautaa rajalta

    Timo Kouki

    book
  2. Black Cat Weekly #37

    Naomi Kritzer, N. M. Cedeño, Hal Charles, Janice Law, A.R. Morlan, Malcolm Jameson, George O. Smith, Hulbert Footner, Nicholas Carter, Otis Adelbert Kline

    book
  3. Another Load of Bull

    David Read

    audiobook
  4. Do Right and Fear No One

    Leslie Thomas QC

    audiobookbook
  5. My Grandfather's Knife : And Other Stories of War and Belongings

    Joseph Pearson

    audiobookbook
  6. The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man

    James Weldon Johnson

    audiobookbook
  7. Growing Up in Country Australia

    Rick Morton

    audiobook
  8. Cricket Ka Commonwealth : Vishwa ke Sabse Shishth Khel ke Saath Mera Ajivan Prem Sambandh

    Ramachandra Guha, Ketan Ketan Mishra

    audiobook
  9. The 56

    Douglas MacKinnon

    audiobook
  10. Arin työt

    Ari Sihvola

    book
  11. The Real Hank Aaron

    Terence Moore

    audiobook
  12. Elävän kuvan käsikirja

    Erkki Kivi, Kari Pirilä

    book

  • 2 books

    Chandrahas Choudhury

    Chandrahas Choudhury is the author of Clouds and Arzee the Dwarf. He is also the editor of the anthology India: A Traveler’s Literary Companion. His essays on literature, travel, and politics appear regularly in The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Condé Nast Traveller, and Mint. A long-time resident of Bombay, he now lives in Delhi.

    Read more

Help and contact


About us

  • Our story
  • Career
  • Press
  • Accessibility
  • Partner with us
  • Investor relations
  • Instagram
  • Facebook

Explore

  • Categories
  • Audiobooks
  • E-books
  • Magazines
  • For kids
  • Top lists

Popular categories

  • Crime
  • Biographies and reportage
  • Fiction
  • Feel-good and romance
  • Personal development
  • Children's books
  • True stories
  • Sleep and relaxation

Nextory

Copyright © 2025 Nextory AB

Privacy Policy · Terms ·
Excellent4.3 out of 5