Nilanjana S. Roy (born c. 1971) is an Indian journalist, literary critic, editor, and author. She has written the fiction books The Wildings and The Hundred Names of Darkness, and the essay collection The Girl Who Ate Books. She is the editor of the anthologies A Matter of Taste: The Penguin Book of Indian Writing on Food and Our Freedoms.
Roy is represented by the renowned literary agent David Godwin.[10]
Roy is the author of The Wildings, which won the Shakti Bhatt First Book Award in 2013.[11] It was also shortlisted for the Tata Literature First Book Award (2012) and Commonwealth First Book Award, and longlisted for the DSC Prize (2013). In a review for DNA, Deepanjana Pal writes, "The world as imagined by Roy in this remarkable debut is filled with marvels, not the least of which is the feline social media network which makes Twitter look witheringly banal."[12]Publishers Weekly wrote, "Roy's imaginative tale makes an evocative comment on life and survival."[13]
The Hundred Names of Darkness, the sequel of The Wildings, was published in 2013.[14] In a review for DNA, Rachel Pilaka writes, "Roy's animal kingdom certainly begs for a movie series."[15] Roy is also the editor of A Matter of Taste: The Penguin Book Of Indian Writing On Food, an anthology of food writing.[16]
In 2016, she released an essay collection titled The Girl Who Ate Books, that she wrote over twenty years.[17][14] In a review for The Indian Express, Abhijit Gupta writes that it is a "book about books," and "Culled from Roy's columns for over two decades, the essays constitute a virtual Who's Who of the world of Indian English letters."[18] In a review for Scroll.in, Devapriya Roy writes the book "is also about the literary lives and reading cultures in and of two cities, Delhi and Kolkata" and "contains Roy's insightful – often insider – observations on that highly diffuse yet vibrant category, Indian Writing in English."[2] In a review for Mint, Sumana Roy writes the collection "documents the birth of a habit, of how the thing we casually call Indian English literature turned from curiosity to comfort—this is literary history told as observer and participant, and it is the latter that will make this book stand out among the many that I imagine being written many years later".[16]
With Anikendra Nath Sen and Devangshu Datta, she edited Patriots, Poets and Prisoners: Selections from Ramananda Chatterjee's the Modern Review, 1907-1947, which was released in 2016.[19][20]Salil Tripathi writes in Mint that the editors "have reminded India of how opinions were expressed once, and how that was possible even at a time when a colonial power ruled India."[21] Roy also edited the 2021 anthology Our Freedoms, described in a review by Kalrav Joshi for The Wire as a book "about the politics of religion, caste and gender; the language of dissent; the limits of free expression; and challenges to constitutional democracy and secularism."[22]
Bibliography
A Matter of Taste: The Penguin Book of Indian Writing on Food, Edited by Nilanjana Roy, Penguin Books, 2005. ISBN0143031481
The Wildings, Aleph Book Company, 2012, Random House, 2016. ISBN9788192328096
The Hundred Names of Darkness, Aleph Book Company, 2013. ISBN9789382277774
Patriots, Poets and Prisoners: Selections from Ramananda Chatterjee's the Modern Review, 1907-1947, Edited by Anikendra Nath Sen, Devangshu Datta and Nilanjana S Roy, Harpers Collins, 2016. ISBN9789352640218
Our Freedoms, Edited by Nilanjana Roy, Juggernaut Books, 2021. ISBN9789353451455
Personal life
She is married to Devangshu Datta,[23] who is a columnist at the Business Standard.[24] Her cats include Mara, Tiglath, Bathsheba, and Lola.[25][23]