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The Bangalore Review

The Bangalore Review

Vol. XIII | Issue 5 | February 2026

  • 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
B
Categories
  • Poetry
April, 2023

Between Episodes

I got moon boots, you got moon boots. We all scream for ice cream but to no avail – our prayers are answered at no better than the rate of chance. There's no glissando without stops and starts. Nor parallel nor intersecting, one guideline has teeth and one has dreams.
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T
Categories
  • Editorial
  • Specials
March, 2023

TBR Interviews Jacinta Kerketta

Our editor interviews Jacinta Kerketta, poet, writer, activist and freelance journalist.
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H
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2023

How to wear gingham shirts, like a 10-month-old

realizing it also has a pocket, wondering what a ten month old would keep inside. gazing at the blueberry stain as I vacantly rub a wet Q tip over it, again.
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S
Categories
  • Literature
  • Non-Fiction
March, 2023

Starting Late – Reflections on becoming a Writer

The author shares her reflections on becoming a writer and the tussle between self-publishing and traditional publishing.
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F
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2023

Five Poems by Esther Sadoff

We are this and this and this,  cinders flaming like lighthouses enveloped by fog,  someone tripping in the yard,  someone stumbling through the door. 
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H
Categories
  • Creative Non-Fiction
  • Non-Fiction
March, 2023

Honey Balm

The author weaves a telling tale out of a a complex fusion of honey, mountains, lungs, honeycombs, childhood memories and falling stars.
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M
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
March, 2023

My Huckleberry Friend

He smiled with a calm demeanor. When I looked at Sandeep, I saw that he was at peace with his thoughts. Here’s a man satisfied at making decisions with his heart. The sun was setting at the horizon, and his soft features were bathed in the twilight. I envied Sandeep.
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y
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2023

youse

I think slowly, with the deliberation I need to follow through sounds, not drop silverware.When I open my mouth, the oh sound doesn't ah, remains round.
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T
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
March, 2023

The Women Who Wear Black Hats

Most of them were women. Sometimes a man would join them, if he had known the deceased. This was always exciting; most of the women were widows. Mary’s husband was the latest to go, last July sixth. His name had been Carl, and his funeral was a good one.
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A
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2023

A Nemo amongst the anemones

The clear blue of the ocean deep swam in. And then out. The salt dissolved the knots in my stomach.
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N
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Flash Fiction
March, 2023

Nasima

The next morning, I found Zakaria and, by the afternoon, Nasima was in my flat swabbing the floors in a green sari. She was dark and thin with high cheekbones and deep-set eyes that sparked. She told me she was twenty-five, a year my senior. She had three children and a husband who peddled a cycle rickshaw.
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I
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2023

It is (just)

ah,  here is the robin      (Just) here, the wren      (Just) the sharp tongue of the irises      (Just) the velvet bud      (Just) Light and Earth      (Just)
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B
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
March, 2023

Broken Glass

In my room, the shadows were lifting with the promise of a brand-new day. My head pounded. The rest of the dreadful things that I could have said to my mother was stuck in my chest with no release or room. I spoke this way to no one else. I took a deep breath.
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T
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2023

Taxidermy

For finding yourself in collisions You did not choose. You could not avoid. The Flesh around the cleaved frame
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T
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
March, 2023

The Caul

Before her unexpected death, one for the books, really, my mother aimed for fancy. She smelled like musky southern roses. She exuded beauty, with her violet eyes — Elizabeth Taylor eyes — and skin soft as peaches. And yet, all the while, something unkind coursed through her, and I could not tell you why. Was it the town?
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S
Categories
  • Poetry
March, 2023

Safar/Dust in the wind

Holy darvish, Shams-i-perende, Kāmil-i-Tabrīzī — I had not known then that I had been looking for you.
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K
Categories
  • Creative Non-Fiction
  • Non-Fiction
March, 2023

King’s Cross

The author writes of a night's experience replete with classical music, a cup of chai and nostalgia.
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U
Categories
  • Specials
  • TBR Roundtable
February, 2023

Understanding the Art of Translation

Welcome to another session of TBR Talks, where we discuss the art of translation. This session of TBR Talks is moderated by Maitreyee Chowdhury, Managing Editor at The Bangalore Review.
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M
Categories
  • Book Reviews
  • Non-Fiction
February, 2023

Midnight’s Borders by Suchitra Vijayan

J.G.P. MacAdam reviews Suchitra Vijayan's book Midnight’s Borders: A People’s History of Modern India
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O
Categories
  • Creative Non-Fiction
  • Non-Fiction
February, 2023

Oxygen to the Brain

The author, along with her family, go for a snowboarding post-quarantine vacation and she discovers, among other things, layers of meaning in Frost's poem.
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B
Categories
  • Fiction
  • Short Fiction
February, 2023

Before The Father He Knew

As they walked down the hallway, he felt embarrassed at the thought that if the restaurant were full, he wouldn’t be able to pick out Xaver. Fortunately, it was between lunch and dinner hour, and the restaurant was empty. The lone man sitting at the back table looked like an older version of a photo Finn had seen of Xaver.
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P
Categories
  • Poetry
February, 2023

Pictures, more than Words

Shine a light through my gullet doc and you'll see intestine walls lined with fishes that I drew as a kid. Fishes, yeah. Plural. Tried to warn them about war, doc. Nobody listened.
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The Bangalore Review
Vol. XIII | Issue 5 | February 2025

ISSN 2770-0828

Published online every month by Spanning Minds, Inc.

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