Exchanging extra goods
with each other led to
Trading. Communities
began to exchange
goods in barter system
to maintain harmonious
relationship. Trading
developed
and
spread across various
communities who
exchanged goods over
long distances.
Answers
Answer:
ome
Latest
Most Read
My Reads
Saved
India
Cities
Cricket
Entertainment
Editorials
Home / Books / Review: The Story of a Long Distance Marriage by Siddhesh Inamdar
The course of true love never did run smooth.(Shutterstock)
The course of true love never did run smooth.(Shutterstock)
BOOKS
Review: The Story of a Long Distance Marriage by Siddhesh Inamdar
A contemporary romance about people who could be your friends.
By Biswadeep Ghosh | Hindustan Times
UPDATED ON AUG 10, 2019 10:03 AM IST
192pp, Rs 199; HarperCollins
192pp, Rs 199; HarperCollins
We often come across individuals in a marriage, who have vastly different priorities. The significant difference in modern times is that more people express their desires freely. This is particularly true of the urban Indian woman for whom the concealment of aspirations is no longer an option. In Siddhesh Inamdar’s novel The Story of a Long-Distance Marriage, the wife is leaving for higher studies in New York. She tells the husband, “I want to live my life and my hopes and my dreams even if it means living away from you for a year or two.” Of course, the couple will “always have each other to come back to.” Reality isn’t that simple.
The protagonists are of the sort that the reader has probably met. Rohan Shastri, the husband, is Kannadiga Hindu and his wife, Ira Sebastian, is Goan Catholic. The couple live in a rented apartment in Shahpur Jat, a South Delhi locality. Shobha, the domestic help, is Bengali. Momo, a dog that had been brought home from the streets, is the baby of the family
Answer:
Happy Birthday friend ,today is your birthday na