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Review: Untwine the Wind

Renee Ranchan’s collection, Untwine the Wind, is not intended to serve notice that she is the next Nissim Ezekiel. Rather, it is an attempt to collect deeply felt, easily accessible poems in a beautiful package. About the book | About the author | Endorsements | Excerpts

Updated on: Sep 11, 2010 03:15 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By , New Delhi
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Untwine the Wind

HT Image
HT Image

Renee Ranchan

Konark

R750

pp 110

All over the world, poetry is something of a publisher’s nightmare. On the one hand, nobody disputes that it is an important literary form. On the other, nobody seems ready to buy it either. Nor is there any popular criticism of poetry. There are literary critics applying one set of standards to all poetry, reviewing each other’s poetry and keeping the circle tightly closed.

But because the subject is so vast, and the styles so varied from the English-American school to the less structured European poets, such criticism is often lost on ordinary readers. Renee Ranchan’s collection,

Untwine the Wind

, is not

Renee Ranchan - Author

intended to serve notice that she is the next Nissim Ezekiel. Rather, it is an attempt to collect deeply felt, easily accessible poems in a beautiful package.

Ranchan is a well-known journalist but so far we have only associated her byline with prose — with columns and features. This collection shows that when she extends her range, she can write poetry with the same felicity.

 
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Vir Sanghvi

Why hide the papers? Why keep the conspiracy theories related to Netaji Subhas Bose’s death alive? And why deny India the truth about the death of one of its great freedom fighters?

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