Friends of Writers Fall Fête feat. Sarah Audsley, Rita Banerjee, Megan Pinto, Carter Sickels, and Connie Voisine – October 26, 2024 * 7 pm EDT

Join Friends of Writers on October 26th at 7:00 PM ET for FOW Fall Fête, a celebration and fundraiser honoring the work of Friends of Writers in Hillsborough, North Carolina presented by FOW and House Party Reading Series. The evening will feature readings by alumni and faculty from the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College including Sarah Audsley, Rita Banerjee, Megan Pinto, Carter Sickels, and Connie Voisine. 

The event is free and open to the public. Limited edition broadsides made by Trish Marshall will be available for sale. Audio recording will be available after the event to registrants. RSVP required.

Please Register & RSVP Here:
https://friendsofwriters.org/2024-fall-fete/

Sarah Audsley is the author of Landlock X (Texas Review Press). A Korean American adoptee, a graduate of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College, and a member of The Starlings Collective, Audsley lives and works in northern Vermont. She is the Writing Program Director at Vermont Studio Center.

Rita Banerjee is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and Director of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College. She is the author of the poetry collections Echo in Four Beats, which was named one of Book Riot’s “Must-Read Poetic Voices of Split This Rock 2018,” and Cracklers at Night. She is also editor of CREDO: An Anthology of Manifestos and Sourcebook for Creative Writing, and author of the novella “A Night with Kali” in Approaching Footsteps. She received her doctorate in Comparative Literature from Harvard University and her MFA in Creative Writing from the University of Washington, and her work appears in Academy of American Poets, Poets & Writers, PANK, Nat. Brut., Hunger Mountain, Tupelo Quarterly, Isele Magazine, Los Angeles Review of Books, VIDA, Vermont Public Radio, and elsewhere. She serves as Editor-at-Large of the South Asian Avant-Garde and Executive Creative Director of the Cambridge Writers’ Workshop, and she is the co-writer and co-director of Burning Down the Louvre, a forthcoming documentary film about race, intimacy, and tribalism in the United States and in France. She received a 2021-2022 Creation Grant from the Vermont Arts Council for her new memoir and manifesto on female cool, and one of the opening chapters of this new memoir, “Birth of Cool” was a Notable Essay in the 2020 Best American Essays, and another chapter from her new memoir, “The Female Gaze,” was a Notable Essay in the 2023 Best American Essays.

Megan Pinto’s debut collection, Saints of Little Faith, is forthcoming with Four Way Books in September 2024. The winner of the 2023 Halley Prize from the Massachusetts Quarterly Review, Megan’s poems can be found or are forthcoming in the Los Angeles Review of Books, Guernica, Ploughshares, Lit Hub, and elsewhere. Megan has received scholarships and fellowships from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the Martha’s Vineyard Institute of Creative Writing, the Port Townsend Writers’ Conference, Storyknife, The Peace Studio and an Amy Award from Poets & Writers. She lives in Brooklyn and holds an MFA in Poetry from Warren Wilson. http://www.meganpinto.com

Carter Sickels is the author of the novel The Prettiest Star (Hub City, 2020), winner of the Ohioana Book Award in Fiction, the Southern Book Prize, and the Weatherford Award, and selected as a Kirkus Best Book of 2020 and a Best LGBT Book by O Magazine. His debut novel The Evening Hour (Bloomsbury, 2012) was a Lambda Award and Triangle Publishing Award finalist, and adapted into a feature film that premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2020. His writing has appeared in publications including The Kenyon Review, The Atlantic, Oxford American, Poets & Writers, BuzzFeed, and Guernica. Carter has received fellowships from the Bread Loaf Writers’ Conference, the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, and MacDowell. He is an assistant professor of English and Creative Writing at North Carolina State University. You can find more information at http://www.cartersickels.com.

Connie Voisine is the author of the recent book of poems, The Bower, begun on a Fulbright Fellowship to Northern Ireland. A previous book, Rare High Meadow of Which I Might Dream, was a finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Award. Her first book, Cathedral of the North, won the Associated Writing Program’s Award in Poetry. She has poems published in The New Yorker, Ploughshares, Poetry Magazine, Black Warrior Review, The Threepenny Review, and elsewhere. Educated at Yale University, University of California at Irvine, and University of Utah, Voisine directs the creative writing program at New Mexico State University and teaches in Warren Wilson College’s MFA for Writers. She was a 2021-2022 Guggenheim Fellow.

July 2024 Faculty Lectures from the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College Now Available

The MFA Program for Writers recently celebrated its annual summer residency at Warren Wilson College in Swannanoa, North Carolina. The residency featured inspiring lectures and classes from both faculty and graduating students. And writers and readers can access the wonderful craft discussions and lectures from the MFA Program for Writers faculty online here. Rita Banerjee’s Opening Lecture, “Narrative Design from World Literature: the Kishōtenketsu and West African Griot Tradition,” explores how we can expand our craft knowledge and technique as writers by studying narrative design from world literature. The Japanese kishōtenketsu offers a new way to compose a poem or story beyond the Western emphasis on the plot triangle or Aristotelian idea of “plot is action.” Likewise, the West African Griot Tradition emphasizes the communal aspect of storytelling and notes the import of the storyteller and listener in the creation of a tale the sustains the history of a community and imagines its future. Some authors studied in the talk include Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, E.J. Koh, Ocean Vuong, Samuel Kọ́láwọ́lé, Yaa Gyasi, Teju Cole, and JJJJJerome Ellis.

The Warren Wilson MFA Program for Writers store features a rich archive of faculty lectures and craft discussions from January 1992 – July 2024, and can be accessed here: https://www.wwcmfa.org/store/

Bryant Park Reading Room feat. Rita Banerjee, Kate Gale, Erika Meitner, and Jason Schneiderman – August 13, 2024 * 6 pm EDT

On August 13, the Bryant Park Reading Room (curated by Jason Schneiderman) will feature poets Rita Banerjee, Kate Gale, Erika Meitner, and Jason Schneiderman for a reading from 6:00-7:00 pm EDT.

If you are available in NYC, please stop by, and learn more about the August 13 Bryant Park Reading Room reading here. Books by authors will be available for purchase via Kinokuniya.

Featured Authors:

Rita Banerjee is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and Director of the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College. She is author of Disobedient Futures, CREDO: An Anthology of Manifestos and Sourcebook for Creative Writing, Echo in Four Beats, the novella “A Night with Kali” in Approaching Footsteps, and Cracklers at Night. She received her doctorate in Comparative Literature from Harvard and her MFA from the University of Washington. Her work appears in Hunger Mountain, Isele, Nat. Brut., Poets & Writers, Academy of American Poets, Los Angeles Review of Books, Vermont Public Radio, and elsewhere. She received a VAC Creation Grant for her new memoir and manifesto on female cool, and one of the opening chapters of this memoir, “Birth of Cool” was a Notable Essay in the 2020 Best American Essays, and another chapter, “The Female Gaze,” was a Notable Essay in the 2023 Best American Essays.

Dr. Kate Gale is co-founder and publisher of Red Hen Press. She is the author of Under a Neon Sun from Three Rooms Press and The Loneliest Girl from the University of New Mexico Press and of seven books of poetry including The Goldilocks Zone and six librettos including Rio de Sangre, a libretto for an opera with composer Don Davis, which had its world premiere at the Florentine Opera in Milwaukee.  Her opera on Esther was written for the singer Hila Plitmann and is in process with the composer Mark Abel. 

Erika Meitner is the author of six books of poems, including Useful Junk (BOA Editions, 2022), and Holy Moly Carry Me (BOA Editions, 2018)–winner of the 2018 National Jewish Book Award and a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award in poetry. Her poems have been published most recently in Electric Literature, Oxford American, The New Yorker, Orion, The New Republic, Virginia Quarterly Review, and The Rumpus. Meitner is currently a professor of English and MFA program director at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Jason Schneiderman is the author of five poetry collections, most recently Hold Me Tight (Red Hen, 2020), and including the forthcoming Self Portrait of Icarus as a Country on Fire (Red Hen, 2024). He edited the anthology Queer: A Reader for Writers (Oxford UP 2016). His poems and essays have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies. His awards include the Emily Dickinson Award, the Shestack Award and a Fulbright Fellowship. He is longtime co-host of the podcast Painted Bride Quarterly Slush Pile and a guest host for The Slowdown. He is Professor of English at the Borough of Manhattan Community College and teaches in the MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College.

Disobedient Futures Anthology (ed. Rita Banerjee, Diana Norma Szokolyai, and Corrine Previte) Acquired by University Press of Kentucky

Editors Rita Banerjee, Diana Norma Szokolyai, and Corrine Previte are delighted to share that their new speculative literature anthology Disobedient Futures has been acquired by University Press of Kentucky! Banerjee, Szokolyai, and Previte are delighted to be working with Editor Abby Freeland and her team including Alice Fugate Brown at University Press of Kentucky. Here’s a bit more about Disobedient Futures:

Rita Banerjee, Diana Norma Szokolyai, and Corrine Previte’s, ed’s, DISOBEDIENT FUTURES, a speculative literature anthology that imagines what the future cultures of America and the world might look like through a diverse, inclusive, and multi-genre lens, and includes fiction, poetry, nonfiction, hybrid work, art, and photography that explore utopian, dystopian, and alternative realities, futuristic places, and parallel histories to Abby Freeland at University Press of Kentucky (world).

Featured Authors:

George Abraham | Thommy Ahneesan | Kazim Ali | Kenzie Allen | Paul Daniel Ash | Madeleine Barnes | Rita Banerjee | Zeina Hashem Beck | Alyssa Beckitt | Oliver Baez Bendorf | Emma Bolden | Frances Cannon | Alex Carrigan | Marianne Chan | Kholoud Charaf | Marlena Chertock | Kristina Marie Darling | JJJJJerome Ellis | Ayokunle Falomo | Carlos Andrés Gómez | Dipika Guha | Robin Hemley | Candace Jensen | Shanta Lee | Shirley Jones-Luke | Ilya Kaminsky | Liz Kellebrew | Raphaël Amahl Khouri | Samuel Kọ́láwọlé | Oksana Marafioti | Adam McOmber | Sebastian Merrill | Rajiv Mohabir | Neha Mulay | Ukamaka Olisakwe | Matthew Olzmann | January Gill O’Neil | Josiah Patterson | Diana Norma Szokolyai | Corrine Previte | Ruben Quesada | Thaddeus Rutkowski | Nneka Samuel | Jason Schneiderman | Kyle Scott | Dayton Shafer | David Shields | Erin Stalcup | Margo Taft Stever | Bianca Stone | Anca L. Szilágyi | Brian Teare | Ella Voss | David Heska Wanbli Weiden | Cecilia Woloch

#RitaBanerjee #DianaNormaSzokolyai #CorrinePrevite #CambridgeWritersWorkshop #fiction #poetry #nonfiction #art #photography #hybridwork #speculativeliterature

“Time Capsule” Poetry Anthology feat. Rita Banerjee debuts at the Putney Public Library in Vermont on June 15, 2024 & July 13, 2024

Rita Banerjee’s Hindi/English poem “एक रात में (One Night)” be part of “Time Capsule,” a collection of poems curated by writer and artist Candace Jensen , Emily Zervas, and Michelle Blake and created on a letterpress at the Ruth Stone House for the Putney Public Library. Some poets featured in the “Time Capsule” anthology include Candace Jensen, Ben Pease, Bianca Stone, Amanda Galvan Huynh, Mary Ruefle, Didi Jackson, Major Jackson, Rita Banerjee, and many others.

The reading and release parties for “Time Capsule” will take place on June 15 and July 13 at 1 pm EST at the Putney Public Library (55 Main Street, Putney, VT 05346). More information about Time Capsule and its book launch can be found in the Brattleboro Reformer here.

Copies of “Time Capsule” will be available for sale $50 cash or check to raise money for the library! Bigger donations are always welcome of course. The chapbook contents will be available as an eBook and of course available to borrow from the library! Read more about the “Time Capsule” anthology launch on the Putney Public Library website. And a video of the poem “One Night” can be viewed here:


#putneypubliclibrary #putneyvt #Vermont #writers #TimeCapsule #poetry #RitaBanerjee #HindiPoetry #EnglishPoetry

Rita Banerjee’s poem “Sleep” featured in the “Bijou” Opening Reception at the Salem Arts Festival – June 7, 2024 – July 31, 2024

Rita Banerjee’s poem “Sleep” is featured in “Bijou” Opening Reception at the 2024 Salem Arts Festival from June 7, 2024 – July 31, 2024. The “Bijou” World Poetry Collection is curated by poet Diana Norma Szokolyai and the Chagall Performing Arts Collaborative. You can visit the”Bijou” exhibit at the ChagallPAC / Cambridge Writers’ Workshop Studio at Artist’s Row, 24 New Derby Street, Salem, MA 01970 USA this weekend! More info follows below:

Join us on June 7, 2024 from 7-9 pm ESTfor our Opening Reception for “Bijou,” with live music and mingling.

ChagallPAC is delighted to announce a group exhibition titled “Bijou,” featuring the visual works of Ray Gilbert, Rachel Redux, Zenovia, Osmar K de Leon, Salem Fairy Forest, Diana Norma Sozokolyai, and Holy Crow. This exhibition will run from June 7 – July 31, 2024. Our opening Reception on June 7th will feature some of our artists in attendance, and live music by Victor Pachas.

BIJOU is desirable, sought-after, elegant. A jewel, a trinket, a treasure. Shaped by fingers, ornamental, delicate, prized workmanship. From haunting photos, dreamlike paintings, and bejeweled shrines, the selected works are modern treasure. Rare, handmade, and elegant.

Poets in Exhibition:
Anonymous
Rita Banerjee
Shari Caplan
Wang Chien
Grace Harrington Murdoch
Pete Murdoch
Nancy Pantano
Corrine Previte
J.D. Scrimgeour
Diana Norma Szokolyai
Jezmina von Thiele
Sophia Vassallo
Dan Rice
Jamie Spallino
Maria Silvia Rodrigo Leaman

#RitaBanerjee #poetry #EchoinFourBeats #ChagallPac #cambridgewritersworkshop #DianaNormaSzokolyai

UW Press Celebrates “Aiiieeeee!” and a 50-year Legacy of Asian American Literature feat. Rita Banerjee

In honor of AANHPI month and the 50th anniversary of its publication, poet and writer Shin Yu Pai writes about the game-changing and inspiring legacy of Aiiieeeee! An Anthology of Asian-American Writers (eds. Frank Chin, Jeffery Paul Chan, Lawson Fusao Inada, and Shawn Wong, 1974) for University of Washington Magazine. In the article, “Finding the Words: UW Press Celebrates Aiiieeeee! and a 50-year Legacy of Asian American Literature,” Pai writes:

In 1970, when Shawn Wong was 19 and a student at the University of California at Berkeley, he had to go hunting for Asian American literature on the street.

An English professor told him no such literature existed. But Wong and his friends and fellow writers, Jeffery Paul Chan, Frank Chin and Lawson Fusao Inada, knew that wasn’t true. They had connected over a shared quest to discover Asian American literature. Their dogged search through Bay Area thrift stores and a handful of literary anthologies led them to 14 writers whose work had been largely ignored by mainstream publishers.

As the young editors continued to refine their list of work by overlooked authors, they decided to create an anthology. Chan brought their fledgling manuscript into the Asian American literature class he was teaching at San Francisco State University, while Wong—who would later join the faculty at the UW—used the material in a class he was teaching at Mills College in nearby Oakland. Eventually, the first-time editors published that group of 14 authors, which included UW alumnus John Okada, ’47, ’51, as well as now well-known wordsmiths Toshio Mori, Oscar Peñaranda and Diana Chang. Their radical undertaking culminated in “Aiiieeeee! An Anthology of Asian-American Writers.” 

This year, “Aiiieeeee!” turns 50. First published by the Howard University Press in 1974, the book was republished in 2019 by the University of Washington Press. The new edition holds a foreword by Tara Fickle, associate professor of Asian American studies at Northwestern University, who offers the current generation of readers context about the era and people involved in bringing the book to life. Fickle studied Wong’s correspondence with the writers and his fellow editors. She also looked at the production notes for the book to understand how the collection evolved through the editorial process and what the stakes were for the editors. Fickle’s research into Wong’s archives unearthed the editors’ own reflections on their project. In a letter to Wong, for example, Inada envisioned the anthology’s success. “Our place in history will have the secure feel of real beginnings. After a while, people will refer to us as the fathers … the cornerstones of our culture.”

Inada’s words held true. “Aiiieeeee!”  became a foundational text in Asian American Literature, and its editors were credited for both rescuing stories out of time and opening readers to a diversity of voices and experiences from the Asian American community. The anthology’s 14 pieces range from the 1940s to the 1970s, ending in a time when activists and scholars were challenging stereotypical representations and expectations of the Asian American voice and experience to highlight neglected perspectives and more freshly define the culture. 

Author and activist Ishmael Reed helped the four writers and would-be editors find their way to the Howard University Press. The Howard editors “were the first to realize the legitimacy of Asian American literature,” Wong says. “It was one of the first 10 books on their list. And it was the only one that wasn’t an African American title.”

Reed dubbed Wong and his friends the “Four Horsemen of Asian-American Literature” and encouraged their efforts to provoke, develop and define an Asian American literary canon. Right away, the book garnered positive reviews in Rolling Stone and The New York Times and advanced Wong and his collaborators along their paths as writers and literary activists.

Today, the UW is steeped in the legacy of their groundbreaking work. A wealth of modern Asian American literary voices includes UW alumni and scholars who studied Asian American literature, English literature and ethnic cultural studies.

Wong joined the UW faculty in 1984, after teaching at Mills College, UC Santa Cruz and San Francisco State. He is currently a professor in the English department and has served as chair of English, director of the Creative Writing Program, director of the University Honors Program and faculty in Cinema & Media Studies.

“The UW has always been a place where you can reinvent yourself,” says Wong. “It’s large enough that I could try different things and bring my perspective to lots of different fields.”

Alongside Wong’s legacy, the University of Washington Press has its own long history of engaging contemporary scholars in republishing and recontextualizing Asian American classics for new generations of readers. It also has a long-standing commitment to supporting Asian American scholarship dating to the early 1970s when editor-in-chief Naomi Pascale saw an opportunity to position the press at the forefront of the discipline. In 1973, the press republished Filipino novelist Carlos Bulosan’s “America Is in the Heart.” Over her decades-long career at the UW Press, Pascale acquired many other titles in this area, including Jade Snow Wong’s “Fifth Chinese Daughter” and Janice Mirikitani’s “Awake in the River and Shedding Silence.”

When Nicole Mitchell became publisher of the press in 2012, she led the redesign and refresh of its Asian American classics series and invited contemporary writers and scholars to develop introductions for these new editions. The UW Press also has published titles from UW faculty across disciplines. “Becoming Nisei,” by professors Lisa Hoffman in the School of Urban Studies and Mary Hanneman, ’91, of the School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, looks at Japanese Americans in Tacoma before World War II. Professor Stephen Sumida’s “And the View from the Shore” explores the literary traditions of Hawai’i. The press also has supported prominent Northwest-based Asian American writers including Frank Abe, Peter Bacho, ’74, and Cindy Domingo.

In 2020, Shawn Wong established the Shawn Wong Book Fund at the UW Press to recover forgotten titles, like Louis Chu’s “Eat a Bowl of Tea,” and bring them back into print for the wider public. The newest title in Wong’s series is Willyce Kim’s “Dancer Dawkins and the California Kid”—the first Asian American lesbian novel.

Rising scholars and talented writers are drawn to the UW’s English Ph.D. program. Poet and writer E.J. Koh, ’23, won the Washington State Book Award for her memoir, “The Magical Language of Others.” Her novel, “The Liberators,” was released last fall. At the UW, Koh studied Korean American literature, history and film. Rita Banerjee’s, ’06, recent contemplation on female cool, “The Female Gaze,” was featured in “The Best American Essays” last year. And in her new memoir, “Meet Me Tonight in Atlantic City,” Jane Wong, ’16, writes of finding in the literature of other Asian American artists ways to tell her own story… Today is a new day for underrepresented voices, and Asian American literature is flourishing with fresh new voices… Today is a new day for underrepresented voices, and Asian American literature is flourishing with fresh new voices.

You can read Shin Yu Pai’s full article here.

University of Washington’s Presidential Blog Celebrating AANHPI Communities feat. Rita Banerjee

In honor of AANHPI month, University of Washington President Ana Mari Cauce’s recently honored the legacy and impact Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander communities at the University of Washington in her Presidential Blog. President Cauce writes:

Each May, the nation and our UW community are proud to honor National Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) Heritage Month and to recognize the enormous impact and influence of our AANHPI community members here on campus and across the globe.

Connections to our Asian American (AA) and Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (NHPI) communities run deep at the University of Washington and across the Pacific Northwest. This year’s theme, “Advancing Leaders through Innovation,” offers a terrific lens through which to celebrate the significant role these diverse communities have had in the shaping of America, each through their own language, heritage and culture…

We also celebrate artists like UW Bothell artist-in-residence Anida Yoeu Ali, whose current debut solo show “Hybrid Skin, Mythical Presence” marks Seattle Asian Art Museum’s first exhibition by a Cambodian American artist. And the work of Native Hawaiian astrophysicist Brittany Kamai, cofounder of the Society of Indigenous Physicists (SIP), whose UW course, Pacific Indigenous Astrophysics, focuses uniquely on Indigenous navigation and is available to all UW students.

UW alumni include many talented creators from the AANHPI diaspora, as well, including Washington State Book Award winner E.J. Koh (’23) and Rita Banerjee (’06), whose essay “The Female Gaze,” explores the concept of keeping one’s cool as a woman of color.

This year also marks the 50th anniversary of  the publication of “Aiieeeee!” by the UW Press. This foundational compilation of nearly forgotten works by 14 Asian American writers was anthologized by Shawn Wong, now a UW professor of English. For over five decades, the UW Press has been at the forefront of Asian American scholarship, from republishing work by Filipino novelist Carlos Bulosan in 1973 to the establishment of the Classics of Asian American Literature series, which recently published Willyce Kim’s groundbreaking queer novel, “Dancer Dawkins and the California Kid.”

This month of awareness is also a time to re-affirm our commitment to fighting anti-Asian racism and take collective responsibility in battling all forms of hatred, bigotry and discrimination here on campus and beyond. Let’s celebrate AA and NHPI communities and contributions — in May and throughout the year — for how they contribute to the University’s uniquely diverse and beautifully rich tapestry of cultures and identities.

You can read President Cauce’s full blog post here.

Screening of Saim Sadiq’s Joyland- May 14, 2024

Rita Banerjee will introduce and lead the discussion for Saim Sadiq’s 2022 film, Joyland, on Tuesday, May 14, 2024 from 6-8:30 pm for the Institute for Indology and Tibetology at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. The screening will take place in Seminar Room 427 (Ludwigstr. 31, Munich), and anyone interested in South Asian aesthetics, literary theory, or art-house film is welcome to join the screening. 

“This year’s Queer Palme winner, and the first ever Pakistani film in the Cannes official selection, Saim Sadiq’s debut impresses with its sensitive storytelling and vibrant visuals… Tartly funny and plungingly sad in equal measure, this is nuanced, humane queer filmmaking, more concerned with the textures and particulars of its own intimate story than with grander social statements — even if, as a tale of transgender desire in a Muslim country, its very premise makes it a boundary-breaker.” – Guy Lodge, Variety

Rita Banerjee is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and Director, MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College.

Screening of Sujoy Ghosh’s Kahānī – May 7, 2024

Rita Banerjee will introduce and lead the discussion for Sujoy Ghosh’s 2012 film, Kahānī (Story, कहानी), on Tuesday, May 7, 2024 from 6-8:30 pm for the Institute for Indology and Tibetology at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. The screening will take place in Seminar Room 427 (Ludwigstr. 31, Munich), and anyone interested in South Asian aesthetics, literary theory, or art-house film is welcome to join the screening. 

“The sudden disappearance of an IT contractor in Kolkata triggers a riveting, labyrinthine puzzle, replete with duplicitous spy shenanigans, in Kahaani. Versatile [thespian] powerhouse Vidya Balan follows up her daring vamp in The Dirty Picture with a dazzling portrait of a determined London-based woman traveling to the subcontinent in search of her missing husband. Buttressed by compelling [performances], this adroit thriller makes the occasional misstep but maintains momentum and credibility. Forgoing Bollywood’s standard musical numbers, the pic could potentially cross over to wider [audiences] with an appetite for thrillers.” – Russell Edwards, Variety

Rita Banerjee is an Assistant Professor of Creative Writing and Director, MFA Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College.