Remove ads
Indian novelist and sports writer (born 1973) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Arunabha Sengupta (born Kolkata, India, 13 June 1973) is an Indian sports writer and novelist.
He has written three non-fiction volumes on cricket history with a socio-political perspective as well as four novels and one collection of short stories. He is a cricket historian and a Cricket Writer at CricketCountry.com[1] and Scoreline.org[2]
– The story of India's epochal Test series win in England in 1971. With the series as the main theme, the book is also a look at the complex relationship between India and Britain through the days of colonial rule to the modern day. It has an introduction by Mihir Bose
The book was shortlisted for the Derek Hodgson Cricket Writers' Club Book of the Year Award 2022.[5]
The title was also shortlisted for the British Sports Book Awards 2023 in the Heartaches' Cricket Book of the Year category[6]
The book was listed as one of The Times' Best Sports Books of 2022.[7] Alyson Rudd, chairperson of the William Hill Sports Book of the Year Award, adjudged it to be the best cricket book of 2022. She wrote: "It was a quiet year for cricket books, but arguably the best is Elephant in the Stadium, by Arunabha Sengupta, which is a social history and as much about the legacy of colonialism as it is about India’s first Test series win in England in 1971."[8]
The book was also longlisted for the MCC Cricket Society Book of the Year Award 2023[9]
– A history of The Ashes in a graphic novel format. It is co-written with artist and sports-illustrator Maha and has an introduction by Stephen Chalke
– India and South Africa, the countries and their cricket, through the prism of the incredible partnership between Tendulkar and Azharuddin in the Newlands Test of 1997. It has an introduction by Harsha Bhogle
– A history of South African cricket during the apartheid era 1948–1970 leading up to the Stop The Seventy Tour campaign. It has an introduction by Peter Hain
– A Sherlock Holmes pastiche involving the legendary fictional detective in the backdrop of the epochal 1882 Test match at The Oval. This was shortlisted for the Cricket Society and MCC Book of the Year Award in 2016.[15] This was republished by Max Books in 2016[16]
– A novel set in Amsterdam, dealing with, among others, the travels and travails of a struggling writer in the murky publishing world. ForeWord Reviews[17] rated the novel 5 stars.
– a novel combining the worlds of Software, Love and Aikido and set against the backdrop of 9/11. (The author himself is a first dan black belt in Kobayashi Aikido.)
Both Labyrinth and Bowled Over were listed in the Journal of Commonwealth Literature[21]
"True picture of the Indian workplace" – Book Review India, vol 30 No 7 July 6[22]
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Every time you click a link to Wikipedia, Wiktionary or Wikiquote in your browser's search results, it will show the modern Wikiwand interface.
Wikiwand extension is a five stars, simple, with minimum permission required to keep your browsing private, safe and transparent.