One of the most anticipated books of the year, Lahiri's first novel (after 1999's Pulitzer Prize–winning Interpreter of Maladies) amounts to less than the sum of its parts. Hopscotching across 25 ...
The prize is the Pulitzer; the speaker is Indian-American author Jhumpa Lahiri, whose 1999 debut story collection, ”Interpreter of Maladies,” made her, at 32, one of the youngest writers to win one ...
Unaccustomed Earth is Jhumpa Lahiri's stunning follow to her 1999 Pulitzer Prize-winning short-story collection Interpreter of Maladies and her 2003 novel, The Namesake. This new collection, like ...
Readers, including the author Jhumpa Lahiri, respond to the Barnard president’s guest essay about speakers at universities. Also: The benefits of trees. The museum said the Pulitzer Prize-winning ...
The brouhaha over immigration - with all of the shouting about Dreamers, deportations, walls, and bad words for troubled places - strikes Jhumpa Lahiri especially hard. The British-born, ...
The brouhaha over immigration – with all of the shouting about Dreamers, deportations, walls, and bad words for troubled places – strikes Jhumpa Lahiri especially hard. The British-born, ...
AS LATE-FALL AFTERNOON light floods the high-ceilinged living room of Jhumpa Lahiri’s brownstone in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, the author exudes an outward stillness that in other circumstances might be ...
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Jhumpa Lahiri's new novel is all about small, intimate moments playing out in public places. We never learn the main character's name. It could be anyone in any place.
Writing is delicate work, perhaps doubly so when you are writing in a language that is not your native tongue. But Jhumpa Lahiri is no ordinary writer, and her latest novel, "Whereabouts" (Knopf, 176 ...
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