The Skinning Tree

by Srikumar Sen


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Description:

Winner of 2012 South Asia Prize Set against the Japanese advance on India during the Second World War, The Skinning Tree centers on nine-year-old Sabby, who lives in a Calcutta family where sophisticated British habits such as bridge and dinner parties co-exist with Indian values and nationalism. When Sabby is sent to a boarding school in northern India, he witnesses a strict regime in which the schoolboys are beaten and brutalized by the teachers. The boys themselves take on their abusers’ cruel traits, mindlessly killing animals and hanging their skins on a cactus, before their thoughts turn to even more sinister schemes. Conspiratorial whisperings and plans of revenge spiral into a tragedy engulfing Sabby in a chilling exploration of human nature’s darkest facets.

217
English
Genre, Literature & Fiction

About The Author

Srikumar Sen was born in Calcutta. He moved to England in 1946 when his parents, who were journalists, were transferred to London. He studied at Oxford University, after which he joined The Times. In 1955, he married Eileen Hartwell and they went to India, where he worked at The Statesman in Calcutta. They returned to England in 1965. He worked on The Guardian sports desk for a year before moving to The Times sports desk, where he remained for thirty years, becoming the Boxing Correspondent, a post he held for thirteen years. He is the author of The Skinning Tree. He has three children.


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