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Forgetting

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When. You. Wake. Up. Tomorrow. Everything. Will. Be. Just. The. Same. Yet. Different.

Time is arguably our biggest enemy. And memory, perhaps, our greatest curse. Which makes forgetting the hardest thing to do.

These are stories of difficult pasts, and the struggle to leave them behind. Identical-twin rickshaw drivers are wrongly suspected of terrorism in paranoid Bombay; a Calcutta merchant envies each saree he sells for the intimacy it’ll share with the woman who buys it; an illicit love affair is conducted over nine potent text messages; a lonely astronaut sings out loud, hoping his voice will find an ear somewhere; adivasis, jawans, Naxalites, policemen and journalists in Orissa are caught in a web of violence unleashed on them by both their own histories and that of a nation helplessly repeating it.

Forty-nine tales that speak of the power of forgetting.

240 pages, Paperback

First published December 15, 2014

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Devashish Makhija

8 books5 followers

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Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews
Profile Image for Parth.
94 reviews2 followers
July 14, 2024
My favorite stories amongst the collection were - The Fag End; Red, 17; Bottles; Butterflies on Strings
Profile Image for Arun Singh.
252 reviews13 followers
February 26, 2022
Cover पर लिखा है - These are the stories that speak the power of forgetting. पर मैं इसे झूठ कहूँगा। या कह लो जो मुझे मिला वो इसके उल्टा है। ये कुछ ऐसी कहानियाँ हैं जो भीतर बहुत भीतर अपनी गहरी छाप छोडती हैं and tells you the power of remembrance.

चाहें वो Bottles के सलीम भाई हों, The Fag End का साहिल, By/Two के Rahim Rahman या फिर बहुत सारे दूसरे लोग, जिनके नाम शायद भीतर कहीं ऐसी जगहों पर हैं जहां हम रोज़मर्रा की ज़िंदगी में देख नहीं पाते। वो हमारे साथ रहते हुए दुनिया देखते हैं, जीते हैं, हमसे रास्तों पर टकराते हैं, हम जाने अनजाने उन लोगों की, उन कहानियों के बारे में बहुत बातें करते हैं। वो पल हर पल सांस लेते रहते हैं हमारे जहन में। फिर एक दिन ऐसी ही किसी कहानी के भीतर से आंखो के कोटर मे झाँकते हैं। ये पात्र... नहीं ये लोग हमारे भीतर हैं। हमारी यादों में। हमारी याद करने की क्षमता में।

हर कहानी का कोई न कोई पात्र हमारे जीवन का हिस्सा रहा है। गर्मी में स्कूल के बाहर लगे ठंडा गोला खिलाने वाले सलीम भाई से लेकर आदिवासियों के बीच के reporter तक की कहानियों में Devashish जीवन का हर हिस्सा कुरेदते हैं। और ऐसे लोगों के बारे मे कुरेदते हैं जो इंसान हैं। सब अपने ही जीवन में नाचते हुए जी रहे हैं। देवशीष अपनी cinematic नजर के लेंस से उन्हें देखते हैं और फिर लेखक के हाथों से बहुत खूबसूरती से लिखते हैं। उनकी आँखों से बहुत सी साधारण सी दिखने वाली कहानियाँ अपनी सारी रंगत के साथ सामने आ जाती हैं। उनके अच्छे filmmaker होने का असर होगा, शायद।

पढ़ते पढ़ते अहसास हुआ है किअसल में कहानियाँ forgetting और जो भी हमारा इस शब्द से संबंध है, ये उसके बारे में नहीं हैं। ये कहानियाँ उन बहुत निजी क्षणों के बारे में है जब हमें याद आता है कि क्या याद रखना जरूरी है और क्यूँ कुछ चीज़ें याद रखना जरूरी है। हमें मनुष्य क्या बनाता है? कैसे कहानियों में हर कोई मनुष्य बनने के लिए कुछ न कुछ याद रखने की कोशिश मे है और फिर कुछ भूलने की भी। बचपन से लेकर बूढ़े होने तक हम कितना कुछ भूल जाते हैं, भूल जाएंगे और कितना कुछ याद रहेगा... इन कहानियों के अंत में पहुँचकर लगा कि मैं बूढ़ा हो चुका हूँ और अपनी हाथ की रेखाओं को टटोलकर देख रहा हूँ कि क्या ये बचा रहेगा मेरे पास या फिर forgetting की सतत प्रक्रिया में कहीं खो जाएगा।

Devashish का ये कहानियाँ लिखने और remembrance की power याद दिलाने के लिए शुक्रिया।
Profile Image for Disha.
24 reviews35 followers
May 28, 2015
In our everyday lives, we keep spelling out the importance of letting go. But, do we really let go? Often, you might end up reading the old pages of your journal and try to meet the old you or you might look at old pictures and revel in the spirit of the past. Fragments of moments dear to us or that we wish to avoid find home in the deepest realms of our mind without even us realising. Devashish​ explores these ideas and many more in #Forgetting and boy does he excel or what! 49 stories that not just tug at your heartstrings, but also make you explore the dark. Be it the love affair over 9 text messages or a housewife using a crossword to define herself. They make you question. What is it that makes you hold on so dearly to the past in small ways or the other. After all, we are just pieces of yesterday and we are just memories. All we have in its complete entirety is this moment.

P.S: Full points for the cover. :)
Profile Image for Muskan | The Quirky Reader.
182 reviews57 followers
December 9, 2019

The book is a collection of short stories and some microfiction as well, which doesn’t really follow a theme, except the stories really shake you up and make you think!
As it is a collection of short stories, you’d think that there won’t be much to say about the characters, but you’re wrong. The characters were the most fascinating elements of all stories. Every (named) character was going through a different kind of suffering and even though his troubles were solved in the end, it never was the way I expected (or even he did, for that matter)
I really like the writing style, it is quite mysterious and can sometimes be hard to follow, which is what I liked about it. It was raw and fresh, but it also seemed like the writer had thought it well through.
The stories are all unique, there is no repetition so you’ll find something new with every turn of page.
However, even with all that, something just didn’t work for me. I was hooked to it, yes. I was curious, yes. But I still don’t feel like I can say I loved this book, or even liked it. This book has all good things but is missing that one element that sways you as you read.

Profile Image for Gediminas.
236 reviews16 followers
November 4, 2015
49 stories: some taking up just a few lines, some flourishing over 30+ pages.
All of them connected by a common set of emotions and themes, although each exploring it in a different, but always subtle way. Some stories truly struck a chord with me, but which ones will do the same for you? I can't tell...
Displaying 1 - 6 of 6 reviews

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