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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Bapsi_SidhwaBapsi Sidhwa - Wikipedia

    Bapsi Sidhwa is a Pakistani novelist of Gujarati Parsi Zoroastrian descent who writes in English and lives in the US. She is known for her novels based on the Partition of India, such as Ice Candy Man and Water, which were adapted into films by Deepa Mehta.

    • Biography
    • Parsi/Zoroastrianism
    • Cracking India
    • Works Cited
    • Bibliography of Related Sources
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    Bapsi Sidhwa is Pakistan’s leading diasporic writer. She has produced four novels in English that reflect her personal experience of the Indian subcontinent’s Partition, abuse against women, immigration to the US, and membership in the Parsi/Zoroastrian community. Born on August 11, 1938 in Karachi, in what is now Pakistan, and migrating shortly th...

    What is most remarkable about Bapsi Sidhwa’s perspective on the Partition of the Indian Subcontinent is her religious distance from its most immediate effects as a member of the Parsi/Zoroastrian community. The traditional story of the Parsees’ arrival from Iran to India in the 8th century C.E., in which an Indian prince sent Zoroastrian refugees f...

    In her third novel, Cracking India, Bapsi Sidhwa delicately threads the story of an 8 year old girl named Lenny with the din of violence ready to crash around her world as the Partition moves from political planning into reality. The story is told in the present tense as the events unfold before the young girl’s eyes, though moments of an older Len...

    Graeber, Laurel. “The Seeds of Partition.” Review of Cracking India. New York Times Book Review6 Oct. 1991.
    Gutman, Ruth. “Visiting Prof’s Novel to be in Film.” (27 Feb. 1997) The Mount Holyoke News.
    Hower, Edward. “Ties That Bind.” The World & I. Mar. 1994: 297-301.
    Sidhwa, Bapsi. “Interview with Bapsi Sidhwa.” The World & I. By Fawzia Afzal-Khan. Mar. 1994: 294-295.
    Bamji, Soli S.”Zoroastrian Religion.” Soli’s Home Page. 2 Apr. 1997. Web.
    Havewalla, Poris Hami.  “Traditional Zoroastrianism: Tenets of the Religion.” (12 Jun.  1995)
    Joshi, Namrata. “The Fire Within.” India Today International. 23 Mar. 1988: 24d-24e.
    Neku, Dr. H.P.B. “The Significance of the Faravahar/Farohar Figure.” (18 Jan. 1997) The Stanford University Zoroastrian Group

    Learn about Bapsi Sidhwa, Pakistan's leading diasporic writer, who explores the Partition, women's rights, and immigration in her novels. Discover her Parsi/Zoroastrian heritage and its influence on her perspective and identity.

  2. Bapsi Sidhwa is a Pakistani-born diasporic writer who has written four novels in English about the Indian subcontinent's Partition, women's rights, and immigration. Learn more about her life, awards, and works on Goodreads, where you can also see ratings, reviews, and editions of her books.

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    • August 11, 1938
  3. Learn about the life and works of Bapsi Sidhwa, a Pakistani-Parsee writer who invented English-language fiction in Pakistan. Explore her novels The Bride, The Crow-Eaters, Ice-Candy-Man, and An American Brat, and her themes of Partition, identity, and culture.

  4. Jan 1, 1988 · Bapsi Sidhwa. 3.85. 5,652 ratings451 reviews. The 1947 Partition of India is the backdrop for this powerful novel, narrated by a precocious child who describes the brutal transition with chilling veracity. Young Lenny Sethi is kept out of school because she suffers from polio.

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    • Paperback
    • Bapsi Sidhwa
  5. Bapsi Sidhwa is a Pakistani novelist who writes in English about her experiences as a woman and a religious minority. She has won many awards and has two novels adapted into films.

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  7. Learn about the life and work of Bapsi Sidhwa, a Pakistani-born author who writes about the partition of India and Pakistan. She shares her memories, experiences, and views on Houston, Zoroastrianism, and film adaptation in this interview.