BOOK REVIEW: CHILDREN’S LITERATURE / Revisiting forgotten babyhood days with ‘Babuibela’
4 August 2021, 18:00 PM
Books & Literature
Tahmima Anam’s ‘The Startup Wife’ arrives at Baatighar
30 June 2021, 13:48 PM
Book Reviews
New online journal ‘Kitchen Sink’ promises an accessible platform for poets
30 June 2021, 12:13 PM
Book Reviews
Is Netflix’s ‘Ray’ worth the watch?
27 June 2021, 12:42 PM
Book Reviews
FROM ELITA’S BOOKSHELF / The book that I would like to read
25 June 2021, 08:38 AM
Reviews
READ ONLINE: INTERVIEW / Unpacking Bangladesh’s obsession with Bollywood
23 June 2021, 18:00 PM
Reviews
REVIEW: SHORT STORY OF THE MONTH / Colm Tóibín takes Henry James for a ride
23 June 2021, 18:00 PM
Reviews
BOOK REVIEW: AUTOFICTION / Who is Ayad Akhtar?
23 June 2021, 18:00 PM
Reviews
‘The Moment of Lift’: Melinda Gates and the developing world’s untapped female-fuel
23 June 2021, 09:04 AM
Reviews
Ann Patchett’s ‘The Dutch House’: On branches of memories and pain
21 June 2021, 13:39 PM
Reviews
3 April 2009, 18:00 PM
3 April 2009, 18:00 PM
3 April 2009, 18:00 PM
3 April 2009, 18:00 PM
3 April 2009, 18:00 PM
A martyr's tale, the story of tea and beating cancer
Selina Parveen remains for this country a reminder of the immense tragedy we went through in 1971 and especially in the days immediately prior to the liberation of Bangladesh. She was one of the many intellectuals picked up by the goon squads set up by the Pakistan occupation army --- Razakars, Al-Badr, Al-Shams --- in the three days preceding the surrender of 93,000 Pakistani soldiers on 16 December. Not one of those hapless Bengalis came back to tell the tale of torture, of the inhumanity that the Pakistanis and their local Bengali collaborators perpetrated on them
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
27 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
20 March 2009, 18:00 PM
13 March 2009, 18:00 PM
13 March 2009, 18:00 PM
13 March 2009, 18:00 PM
13 March 2009, 18:00 PM
13 March 2009, 18:00 PM
6 March 2009, 18:00 PM