Beyond the pages of Anne Frank’s diary

On the first day of this month, 76 years ago, Anne Frank wrote her last diary entry. Three days later, on August 4, the building she was hiding in with her family and four family friends was raided by the Gestapos.
7 August 2020, 09:30 AM

'Shirley' crystallises Shirley Jackson’s contested legacy

Shirley (2020), directed by Josephine Decker and adapted by Sarah Gubbins from the 2014 eponymous novel by Susan Scarf Merrell, interweaves fact and fiction into an imagined narrative about the time when author Shirley Jackson was writing her second novel Hangsaman (1951).
5 August 2020, 18:00 PM

Earth calls the soul in ‘Inner State’

“A poet’s work is to name the unnameable, to point at frauds, to take sides, start arguments, shape the world, and stop it going to sleep.”
5 August 2020, 18:00 PM

A book’s plea for a better internet

“Happily, the Web is so huge that there’s no way any one company can dominate it,” wrote Tim Berners-Lee, the man who invented the World Wide Web (WWW) in 1999.
5 August 2020, 18:00 PM

Conversations from the Daily Star Book Club

On the Daily Star Book Club last week, we asked members how they organise and look after their book collections at home. Here is what we learned:
29 July 2020, 18:00 PM

'Once Upon An Eid': A rare glimpse into Muslim homes

Diversity can seem jaded when it is employed for the sake of appearing “woke”.
29 July 2020, 18:00 PM

Technicolour Mughals: Ira Mukhoty brings Akbar to life

Humans are a storytelling species. Yet history, which is but the stories of yesteryears, is taught like a chain of facts and dates.
29 July 2020, 18:00 PM

Himadri Lahiri’s Diaspora Theory and Transnationalism

The Routledge Diaspora Studies Reader (2017) co-edited by Klaus Stierstorfer and Janet Wilson made significant observations about the increase in global movement of people, capital, products, cultures and ideologies;
24 July 2020, 18:00 PM

in a sleepless trance

I hold stares - I sing to the moon Rigid, motionless - senseless woes
24 July 2020, 18:00 PM

The Retirement

The human race is doing quite well. There was a possibility of a climate catastrophe in the early 21st century but they came to their senses soon enough and managed to deal with it by 2050.
24 July 2020, 18:00 PM

The Bengali summer read

Come June, the season of light reading arrives with the promise of filling lazy afternoons freed from school work or, for adults who can’t manage a vacation, escape in the form of relaxing books.
22 July 2020, 18:00 PM

Rizia Rahman, an antidote to apathy

For lovers of short story collections, Rizia Rahman’s Char Doshoker Golpo (2011) can be great company on lazy afternoons. Rahman is undoubtedly among the finest writers of literature in Bangladesh, yet her craft goes unnoticed by many from the younger generations today.
22 July 2020, 18:00 PM

Bibhutibhushan, an unlikely adventurer

For anyone sitting through heat-stricken afternoons on forever-long summer days, reprieve can come in the form of escape into a fictional world, and Bibhutibhushan Bandyopadhyay is a master at offering it.
22 July 2020, 18:00 PM

Summers with Sarat Chandra

Before my mother bought me a copy of Sarat Shahitya Samagra (2003) one fateful summer back in high school, my exposure to Bangla literature had been limited to Feluda and whatever my textbooks offered.
22 July 2020, 18:00 PM

Mangoes, lychees, and childhood memories in ‘Amar Chelebela’

For me, Amar Chelebela (1991) by Humayun Ahmed would not only be a summer read but also a comfort read, a holiday retreat, a walking tour of a Bangladesh unheard of today, and also a sneak-peak into the daily bustle of a family who redefined literature, science fiction, caricatures, humour and so much more.
22 July 2020, 18:00 PM

Himu of the summer flings

During my adolescent years, I devoted a significant portion of my time exploring the idea of ‘summer love’. The cinephile in me went from cheesy Disney Channel flicks like Lizzie McGuire: The Movie (2003) to masterpieces like Wes Anderson’s Moonrise Kingdom (2012), while the bibliophile in me devoured Andre Aciman’s Call Me By Your Name (2007) and John Green’s An Abundance of Katherines (2006). However, I had to acknowledge all the ways in which these stories didn’t feel relatable to me. Being a Bengali, I’ve grown up reading about the intense romance shared by Devbabu and Paro or watching the pangs of unrequited love in Satyajit Ray’s Charulata (1964). Should I then dismiss the ‘summer fling’ as an irrelevant Western trope? A thing of the sunny Florida beaches and umbrella topped cocktails?
19 July 2020, 13:03 PM

Sparkling Elizabeth and Timid Anne: Two Sides of the Same Coin?

Readers over the last two centuries have generally liked the bright and sparkling world of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, whereas Persuasion has often been described as “a departure from the rest of the novels, a turning away from the brilliant and public play of the mind for the deep and private truths of the heart” (Morgan 168).
17 July 2020, 18:00 PM

Understanding Addiction: A Review of Like a Diamond in the Sky

Unshaven, skeletal men, with hollow, black-ringed eyes, sitting in silent solitude in inner city gutters. Youngsters turned ageless by addiction, their endless need for the next fix drowning out all other desires, commitments or relationships.
17 July 2020, 18:00 PM

DAILY STAR BOOK CLUB PICK

Starting July 15, we at the Daily Star Book Club have started reading Salman Rushdie’s novel Midnight’s Children. Read-along rules, discussions, and a list of stores where the novel is available are all up on DS Book’s social media pages.
15 July 2020, 18:00 PM

On White privilege and Islam

Islam is practised by 1.6 billion people across the world. But when you grow up in a predominantly Muslim country like Bangladesh, it can often exist as a localised concept in your head.
15 July 2020, 18:00 PM