ID | 126044 |
Title Proper | House within |
Other Title Information | Naiyer Masud's multi-story adabistan |
Language | ENG |
Author | Ali, Meher |
Publication | 2011. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Our car comes to a halt a few metres from a main crossing in Turiaganj, also known as Victoriaganj. At first we cannot locate the house, so we climb up a few flights of stairs to a row of shops. There, a shopkeeper points straight ahead and, opposite us, behind shops packed together like a deck of cards, a haveli rises. From afar, it almost seems like a child's sandcastle, with none of the frills commonly associated with havelis of North India. Instead, it seems to have been inspired by gothic architecture, two towers on either side of the conical façade rising up. Crescent-shaped swirls like half-drawn flowers are engraved on their arches, and perpendicular pillars are topped with football-shaped concrete blocks. A plaque above the arch of the left tower reads 'Adabistan' - the abode of literature. As we enter, the haveli greets us with LIVE AND LET LIVE carved along the roof's boundary wall. |
`In' analytical Note | Himal Vol.24, No.12; December 2011: p.76-77 |
Journal Source | Himal Vol.24, No.12; December 2011: p.76-77 |
Key Words | Biography ; Fiction ; Naiyer Masud's ; Searching for Inspiration ; Remembering the Gulmohar ; House ; History |