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Siddharth Shanghvi

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Occupation
  
writer

Name
  
Siddharth Sanghvi

Language
  
English-language

Role
  
Author

Siddharth Sanghvi Tehelka India39s Independent Weekly News Magazine
Born
  
Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi 25 August 1977 (age 46) Mumbai (
1977-08-25
)

Notable works
  
The Last Song of Dusk (2004)

Books
  
The last song of dusk, The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay

Amitabh Bachchan & Jaya Bachchan Launches Siddharth Shanghvi’s New Book ‘The Rabbit & The Squirrel’


Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi (born 1977) is an Indian author in English-language whose notable books include, The Last Song of Dusk (2004) and The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay (2009). He lives in Bombay and is a contributor to Time and other publications.

Contents

Siddharth Shanghvi Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi Jaipur Literature Festival

The Last Song of Dusk (2005), made it to Man Asian Prize: 2009 Shortlist, won the 2004 Betty Trask Award, one of UK's most prestigious prizes for debut novels, and Premio Grinzane Cavour 2005 (Italy) for the Best Debut novel. This book was also theSan Francisco Chronicle Best Book of 2004, a 2006 IMPAC Dublin Literary Award Finalist and a San Francisco Chronicle best-seller., and translated into 10 languages.

Siddharth Shanghvi Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi39s The House Next Door shows in Mumbai

Early life and education

Siddharth Shanghvi httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaeneeaSid

Born in Juhu, Mumbai in a Gujarati Sanghvi family, Siddharth's father is businessman, while his grandfather, Arvind Vasavada, a psychoanalyst and a Jungian scholar.

Siddharth Shanghvi You cannot live in India and not be furious Siddharth Dhanvant

He pursued his MA in International Journalism at the University of Westminster, London, where he specialised in Photography in 1999. His second masters, in mass communications, was from San Jose State University (MS, Distinction).

Career

Siddharth Shanghvi SHANGHVI SIDDHARTH DHANVANT

He wrote his first book "The Last Song of Dusk," at 22, but dropped it when the agent suggested some changes, thereafter he moved to Northern California, having an aunt and uncle in Berkeley, and enrolled in a Master's degree in Mass Communications at San Jose State University. He graduated in 2002 and the book was finally published in 2004.

Siddharth Shanghvi The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay by Siddharth Shanghvi Curtis Brown

Shanghvi has been compared to Salman Rushdie and Vikram Seth in his writing styles, especially for using settings of magical realism, and themes such as karma, love and sexuality extensively in The Last Song of Dusk. His essay, Hello, Darling, appeared in 2008 anthology, AIDS Sutra: Untold Stories From India.

Siddharth Shanghvi A Letter to Boys The Huffington Post

His second book, The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay (2009) which had events taken from the Jessica Lall murder case, received mixed reviews, and later he announced it to be his last.

After his father was diagnosed with cancer in 2007, Shanghvi turned to photography. His photography series The House Next Door, opened at Galleri Kontrast in Stockholm in 2010. In early 2011 it was shown at the Matthieu Foss Gallery, Bombay and later at Delhi's eponymous Vadehra Art Gallery. Referring to this body of work Salman Rushdie (author of Midnight's Children) said, "These pictures touched me deeply. They are at once intimate and clear-sightedly objective, precise and affectionate. The quietness of their world is the silence of memory and sorrow, but there is, too, considerable artistry in the composition, and a joy taken in detail, and character, and place."

He divides time between Albany, California and Mumbai.

Works

  • Last Song of Dusk. Penguin India, 2004. ISBN 0-14-303341-7.
  • Hello, Darling, AIDS Sutra: Untold Stories From India (2008)
  • The Lost Flamingoes of Bombay, Penguin India. 2009, ISBN 0-670-08175-2.
  • References

    Siddharth Shanghvi Wikipedia