Ipsita Chakravarty is an award-winning journalist who has reported on politics and armed conflict in Kashmir and North-East India for a decade. She has worked as a reporter, editor and opinion writer for national dailies including The Times of India, The Telegraph, The Indian Express and Scroll.
‘A triumph. Chakravarty’s “river of stories” presents a prosaic and haunting history of the tragedy that is Kashmir.’ -- <b>John Zubrzycki, author of <i>Dethroned: The Downfall of India’s Princely States</i> and <i>The Shortest History of India</i> 'A beautifully written elegy to Kashmir, capturing the pain of its recent decades of conflict and older history of oppression. Chakravarty brings to life the voices of ordinary Kashmiris with their rich mix of humour, inventiveness, superstition, melancholy and hurt.' -- <b>Myra MacDonald, journalist and author of <i>White as the Shroud: India, Pakistan and War on the Frontiers of Kashmir</i></b> 'What is it like to live in a battleground? To be part of a conflict that has dragged on for two generations? Amid informers and insurgents, protests and crackdowns? Ipsita Chakravarty—a brilliant observer and magical writer—records the stories, and forms of story, by which Kashmiris keep a reckoning. A wonderful, compassionate yet deeply tragic book.' -- <b>Andrew Whitehead, former BBC India Correspondent, and author of <i>A Mission in Kashmir</i></b>