About this item

The author of the widely praised Lunch with a Bigot now gives us a remarkable novel--reminiscent of Teju Cole, W. G. Sebald, John Berger--about a young new immigrant to the United States in search of love: across dividing lines between cultures, between sexes, and between the particular desires of one man and the women he comes to love.The young man is Kailash, from India. His new American friends call him Kalashnikov, AK-47, AK. He takes it all in his stride: he wants to fit in--and more than that, to shine. In the narrative of his years at a university in New York, AK describes the joys and disappointments of his immigrant experience; the unfamiliar political and social textures of campus life; the indelible influence of a charismatic professor--also an immigrant, his personal history as dramatic as AK's is decidedly not; the very different natures of the women he loved, and of himself in and out of love with each of them.



About the Author

Amitava Kumar

Amitava Kumar is a writer and journalist. His books include Lunch With a Bigot listed among the "ten best books of 2015 published by academic presses;" A Matter of Rats, which the New York Times Magazine called "a clear-eyed ode to an implausible place;" A Foreigner Carrying in the Crook of His Arm A Tiny Bomb, adjudged the best nonfiction book of the year by the Page Turner Awards, and described in the New York Times as a "perceptive and soulful ... meditation on the global war on terror and its cultural and human repercussions;" Husband of a Fanatic, an "Editors' Choice" book at the New York Times; Bombay-London-New York, a literary memoir which was on the list of "Books of the Year" in the New Statesman; and Passport Photos, winner of an "Outstanding Book of the Year" award from the Myers Program for the Study of Bigotry and Human Rights in North America. Kumar's essays and reviews have appeared in Harper's, Bookforum, Kenyon Review, The Nation, NPR, The New York Times Book Review, The Guardian, Vanity Fair, Brick, Granta, and numerous other publications. He has been awarded writing residencies by Yaddo, the Norman Mailer Writing Center, and the Lannan Foundation. He is the recipient of a 2016 Guggenheim Fellowship for nonfiction and a Ford fellowship from United States Artists. Kumar is professor of English at Vassar College.



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