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The Bangalore Review

The Bangalore Review

Vol. XIII | Issue 3 | October 2025

  • Non-Fiction
    • Art
    • Book Reviews
    • Cinema
    • Creative Non-Fiction
    • Culture
    • Literature
    • Memoirs
    • Music
    • Nature & Environment
    • Philosophy
  • Specials
    • Editorial
    • TBR Recommends
    • TBR Roundtable
    • Translations
    • Fiction Special 2024
      • Peripheries – of Being and Living
      • Promises Made and Promises Broken – the NATURE of Things
      • Writing From the Peripheries of Language
      • Queering Language
      • Anthologies – The Editorial Perspective
  • Fiction
    • Flash Fiction
    • Short Fiction
  • Poetry
M
Categories
  • Poetry
April, 2024

Mo(u)rning on the River

From one realm to the next, may Your essence forever sizzle and soar. Because whether You believed or not, despite the world not consistently admitting nor deserving it, You were always the hero we needed.
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A
Categories
  • Literature
  • Non-Fiction
April, 2024

A look at Asia’s Biggest Book Fair

The author takes the readers on a journey to the 47th International Kolkata Book Fair.
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T
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
April, 2024

The Trickster

The old man looked out his window – the elderly are just like cats in many ways: from the number of hours they sleep per day, to the habit of peering out of the window at any chance they get (that is, basically every minute).
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P
Categories
  • Poetry
April, 2024

Preet Padam

I am red like raag yaman. Red like stirring ardor, like relentless vikara, Like flesh awash with rasa, Wasteful, like Laal Ishq, Red like death.
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T
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
April, 2024

The Makeover

Good, you say; I’m relieved. You hail the waiter and order two more appetizers. You laugh. You have to keep up your strength you say. When the food comes, we both eat ravenously. I’m getting tired of talking. Let’s take a break, I say; why don’t you talk for a while?
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M
Categories
  • Poetry
April, 2024

MILE 3339

because there will come a mile  where he is too weak to brush a horsefly  from the bridge of his nose, his head on a stretcher pillow  ringed by news microphones, surrounded  by the indifference of trees;
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B
Categories
  • Literature
April, 2024

Book Excerpt from A Long Season of Ashes

TBR presents an extract of Siddhartha Gigoo's A Long Season of Ashes by.
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T
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
April, 2024

The 149th Step

“Hell,” he said, “It was just like a movie, Tish. Janie didn’t have a clue. I drove her out there, blind-fold and all. I brought her down to the dock. Took her blindfold off. She was blown away. Couldn’t believe it. She said, ‘Where are we?’
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K
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
April, 2024

Kevlar Hoodies

Gabby had been in this situation before. People hated to think someone had broken the law of averages. Everyone, she included, knew her luck would run out sooner or later. She’d had dates before where this had been a deal breaker.
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O
Categories
  • Poetry
April, 2024

Ode to working the line

Winking bulbs, screaming vents. You need specialized footwear here. You need to wash workwear in a separate load due to its villainous grease.Senior members will ruthlessly remind. You must learn how to resorb the body’s complaints, fashion stout leather insides out of soft tissue.
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A
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
April, 2024

A Town Without Sidewalks

Ace was a wide man. Over the years, he’d developed layers of fat over his muscle, earned from years of good eating and unseen manual labor on the mountain. His black beard was painted with shades of dusty grey. His face was wrinkled from smiling and squinting in the sun.
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T
Categories
  • Poetry
April, 2024

TRIPTYCH

When he scolded us, in our classroom with Sister Martin standing in back, about dating a non-catholic, his voice rose. “Drop them like a hot potato.”
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M
Categories
  • Specials
March, 2024

Mani Rao shares glimpses of her work place through the years

TBR takes you through this private world of poets and writers through this photo essay. Here Mani Rao gives us a precious glimpse into her work desk, and her books.
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A
Categories
  • Literature
  • Non-Fiction
March, 2024

An Excerpt from 10 Indian Languages and How They Came to Be

The author presents us with an excerpt from his book 10 Indian Languages and How They Came to Be.
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R
Categories
  • Creative Non-Fiction
  • Non-Fiction
March, 2024

Reflections on Loneliness from a Kitchen Sink

Connections can be found in unexpected spaces, such as greenhouses and the flora they house. Despite knowing about greenhouses and histories of violence behind their creation, I wasn’t prepared for the array of emotions that assailed me when I visited a greenhouse for the first time—inside the Jardins Botaniques in Montreal.
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P
Categories
  • Book Reviews
March, 2024

Probably Geranium by Shekhar Banerjee

Maitreyee B. Chowdhury reviews Shekhar Banerjee's poetry collection Probably Geranium.
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H
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
March, 2024

Her Own Shin Bone

"...We don’t expect you to defend your piece – and I honestly don’t think it can be defended – but we would like to hear your thoughts as to what you’ve been told..."
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L
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2024

Listening To Julie London (In The Dark)

This darkness is a blessing, these minor keys in your mouth a different kind of Pentecost—deep cuts cutting me loose from language.
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C
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Flash Fiction
March, 2024

Column Five

Kill or be killed here in this foreign land, he fires at the first silhouette he spies through the sights of his Kalashnikov.
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S
Categories
  • Creative Non-Fiction
  • Non-Fiction
March, 2024

Stalking Annie Dillard

Afterwards, we strolled down the street. Actually, Annie and KK strolled, while I pretended to stroll, trying to inject a measure of insouciance into my knees in the hope that it would work its way upwards. “She is just a person,” I told myself, and turned to her, striving for jauntiness. 
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P
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2024

Persistence

There—stuck in my neural net the drama has no answers for how turritopsis dohrnii can live forever, or why
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E
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
March, 2024

Ember

Radney stood there like a lump of flesh, in boxers that had parrots printed all over them. He was completely bald on top but had fashioned his monk’s fringe into a tiny ponytail.
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The Bangalore Review
Vol. XIII | Issue 4 | December 2025

ISSN 2770-0828

Published online every month by Spanning Minds, Inc.

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