The Witch Some Witch

Damning Her and Damning Me

by Quleen O. Queen


Formats

Hardcover
₹ 749.00
E-Book
₹ 169.00
Softcover
₹ 350.00
Hardcover
₹ 749.00

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 28-10-2016

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 150
ISBN : 9781482883848
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 150
ISBN : 9781482883824
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 150
ISBN : 9781482883831

About the Book

This book is a frightening, tragic, violent, and shameless story of the witch, some witch. As the characters in the novel fret at its suspense, gasp at its terror, and hide it for the sake of reputation, the novel breaks the border between magic and reality. The novel begins with a girl writhing in fear and pain. It proceeds to how the dirty pasts and hidden histories are dug up by the main character. Memories that make you shudder are revisited. And as the violent episodes of riots, lynching, and sexual abuse scream at the characters, some succumb while most rise above the graves of the past. All the while, the hectoring question remains, Is the horror of the witch, some witch, eating away at us, or are we the horror? At last, what has magic got to do here? Grace, the main character, sums it all up with, “When reality had forcibly slept with my skin, magic helped me live through it.”


About the Author

Quleen O. Queen is a writer, journalist, musician, and an avid lawn-tennis player. She works at the Logical Indian as a bureau chief (Jammu and Kashmir) to unearth the ignored stories of the region and capture the important issues of the world at large. As a musician, she is looking ahead to make an album of her self-composed songs and has made musical ghazal renditions of Allama Iqbal’s acclaimed Urdu poetry. As a writer, her interests have been creating short stories and poems, which she intends to print in the near future. Academically, Quleen clinched first position in her master’s and recently submitted her doctoral thesis on the works of Mahasweta Devi, who is a formidable voice of the subalterns in India and abroad.