Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Across the Black Waters

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Publication date
  
1939

OCLC
  
4513599

Author
  
Mulk Raj Anand

Followed by
  
The Sword and the Sickle

Country
  
India

3.7/5
Goodreads

Language
  
English

Media type
  
Print

Originally published
  
1939

Preceded by
  
The Village

Genre
  
Novel

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Similar
  
Works by Mulk Raj Anand, Novels

Across the Black Waters is an English novel by the Indian writer Mulk Raj Anand first published in 1939. It describes the experience of Lalu, a sepoy in the Indian Army fighting on behalf of Britain against the Germans in France during World War I. He is portrayed by the author as an innocent peasant whose poor family was evicted from their land and who only vaguely understands what the war is about. The book has been described as Anand's best work since the Untouchable.

In Lalu's tragedy lied the tragedy of the Indian village and Anand dramatizes a poignant truth: to disposses any one of land is to deny him an identity.—Basavaraj Naikar

The book is part of a trilogy (along with The Village and The Sword and the Sickle) that chronicles the life of Lalu as he struggles to rise from the bottom of Indian society. In the background is India's fight for independence. This book is the only Indian English novel that is set in World War I and portrays the experiences of Lalu, who only wants to reclaim the piece of land his family lost as a reward for serving. But when he returns from war, he finds his family destroyed and his parents dead. The novel's larger themes are that of war and death Lalu encounters Western culture.

References

Across the Black Waters Wikipedia