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Partha hated his life, and had no clue what to do. The overwhelming sense of being stranded and the fervid crisis of taking stock was a double impairment too tangled to make sense.
Twenty-four-year-old Partha, hapless resident of New Delhi and helpless prisoner of his own bewildering anxieties, can’t figure out which way to go, how to find the signposts. He is the classic outsider, estranged from the meaningless rituals of a ‘normal’ world—an excruciating world of job interviews and career prospects, steady incomes and steady girlfriends, masks and blinkers.
The first stirrings of a fledgling love bring Partha no solace—only a greater sense of isolation. Caught between a growing disillusionment with the mushy romanticism of his friend and mentor Ahmadi sahib, and an acute frustration with the pretentious worldliness of his dilettante buddy Kaushik, Partha finds brief comfort in wry humour and the amusing irony of a world teeming with ‘schizophrenics who’ve found one voice to follow!’
The Long Reverie evocatively explores the recesses of a young man’s mind—his baffled angst while trying to find some meaning to his existence, his scathing rejection of society’s hypocrisies, his moment of surrender to the void—and the moment when he steps back from the void to give himself a reprieve.
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Pages : 240
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