Our fiction takes the reader on a journey through the places and imaginations of the region: from digital spaces to mountains of Afghanistan, narratives of LGBT life to a meta-narrative of a woman's agency, and gushing rivers to winding roads. This sample, from both established and emerging authors, provides a sense of the Southasian creative imagination. Take a look; Himal Southasian is a good read.
Umbra by Farrukh Dhondy
A story of an eccentric college-campus guru.
The young shadows gather.
They have come to listen to the greatest of their seers, the philosopher, eschatologist, metaphysician, mathematician, psycho-historian, stainologist, and, alas as the world knew, serial philanderer, the feigningly meek Umbra, 'U' to everyone on campus.
They sit at his feet, leaving respectful light between them.
(Another story by Dhondy, 'Jesus in the throat', was published in our quarterly At the Cost of Health.)