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The Archer

(Hardback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

The Archer

Contributors:

By (Author) Shruti Swamy

ISBN:

9781616209902

Publisher:

Workman Publishing

Imprint:

Algonquin Books

Publication Date:

7th September 2021

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Genre:
Fiction/Non-fiction:

Fiction

Dewey:

813.6

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

304

Weight:

300g

Description

"Set in 1970s Bombay, the novel explores art, ambition, gender roles and class with the same shimmering prose of Swamy's first book, the story collection A House Is a Body."

-San Francisco Chronicle

"[A] sublime, boundary-pushing exploration of sexuality, creativity, and love."

-NPR

In this transfixing novel, a young woman comes of age in 1960s- and 1970s-era Bombay, a vanished world that is complex and indelibly rendered. Vidya's childhood is marked by the shattering absence and then the bewildering reappearance of her mother and baby brother at the family home. Restless, observant, and longing for connection with her brilliant and increasingly troubled mother, Vidya navigates the stifling expectations of her life with a vivid imagination until one day she peeks into a classroom where girls are learning kathak, a dazzling, centuries-old dance form that requires the utmost discipline and focus. Her pursuit of artistic transcendence through kathak soon becomes the organizing principle of her life, even as she leaves home for college and falls in complicated love with her best friend. As the uncertain future looms, she must ultimately confront the tensions between romantic love, her art, and the legacy of her own imperfect mother.

Lyrical and deeply sensual, with writing as mesmerizing as kathak itself, Shruti Swamy's The Archer is a bold portrait of a singular woman coming of age as an artist-navigating desire, duty, and the limits of the body. It is also an electrifying and utterly immersive story about the transformative power of art, and the possibilities that love can open when we're ready.

Reviews

Longlisted for the 2021 Center for Fiction First Novel Prize

Mesmerizingly poetic . . . The Archers beauty resides in Swamy's sequential narrative form, which reads like musicat times almost exactly like reading a musical scorebut with something more; her words carry the visceral power of a dancer's intersection with air . . . [A] sublime, boundary-pushing exploration of sexuality, creativity, and love . . . A sensual, artful dance, powerfully told.
NPR

This novel swallowed me whole. The Archer is the kind of book you always hope for: lush and sensual, tasted and felt, with striking images that play out like film behind the eyes. Swamy evokes an India that resists flat stereotypeand teems with exuberance, beauty, and life.The Archer is timeless yet utterly modern as it asks what it means for a woman to make a life of art.
CPam Zhang, author of How Much of These Hills Is Gold

Shruti Swamy is a writer tocelebrate. Her fiction is provocative, precise, and gorgeously inventive.
Megha Majumdar,author ofA Burning

With its coiled energy and feverish imagery, The Archer often reads more like a lucid dream than a novel, oceans of wild feeling roiling just below the surface . . . Swamy writes about the imperatives of an artists life with bright, furious poetry: the singular will of a body that burns to be in motion, and a mind set free.
Entertainment Weekly

[A] visceral first novel . . . The Archerblends the corporeal and the spiritual in a story about what it means to be a woman and an artist. Swamys writing is transportive, precise and almost hypnotic . . . The authors perceptive and observant eye misses nothing.
BookPage

Set in 1970s Bombay, the novel explores art, ambition, gender roles and class with the same shimmering prose of Swamys first book, the story collection A House Is a Body.
San Francisco Chronicle

A searing portrait of the woman artist . . . Shruti Swamy has defined herself as a bold new voice in not only South Asian diaspora literature, but modern literature as a whole.
Chicago Review of Books

Every page ofThe Archerholds evidence of Swamys talent, each sentence a performance so strong as to appear effortless. But just as with an elite dancer, only in the recognition of the effort can we truly appreciate the art. Like any rapt audience, readers will delight and despair in the fiercely wrought world ofThe Archer, fully aware they are witnessing greatness.
Chapter16

Lush and poetic.
Ms. Magazine

Swamys prose is incantatory and often lovely, swirling in dancelike rhythms that sweep the story along. She builds a complex character in Vidya, whose urge toward autonomy brings results that range from ecstatic to tragic. A young woman seeks freedom through art in a mesmerizing coming-of-age story.
Kirkus Reviews

A saga as rich and gorgeous as Kathak itself.
Library Journal

As in her lauded debut collection, A House Is a Body, Swamy examines womens ownership of their very selves [and] challenges expectations and exposes the limitations of being female.
Booklist

[An] affecting debut novel . . . Swamy confidently evokes the time and place with spare, precise prose. This writer continues to demonstrate an impressive command of her craft.
Publishers Weekly

This is a singular work, a story of a dancer, and of a hungry self seated at the table of womanness and desire and art, told with unparalleled originality and elegance. Swamy writes with a thrilling clarity of vision that wakes the sleepwalker right into joyful consciousness. Every word is intimate, honest, ecstaticutterly alive.
Meng Jin, author of Little Gods

TheArcheris a stunning novel, as intimate and visceral as an expertly executed dance. Swamy's arresting and immersive prose vibrates with attention, and does what the best writing does: it leaves me more alive in my own body, and renders the world around me richermore layeredwith meaning. Meditating on what it means to be an artist (and a woman), Swamy has created her own wondrous work of artsingular, unforgettable, and important.
Rachel Khong, author ofGoodbye, Vitamin

Alive with desire, Shruti Swamy's prismatic language glimmers with the force that drives her characters to dance, beating against the restrictions of body, society, tradition, sexuality, and the fallible self toward a liberatory devotion to life. A gorgeous, taut, deeply embodied reading experience,TheArcherfurther establishes Swamy as a writer of thrilling talent.
Asako Serizawa, author ofInheritors

TheArcherunfolds like an urgent dream, its heroines desirefor artistic transcendence, love, and liberationits driving pulse.This novel, and the many keenly rendered moments within its pages (a swirl of bright fabric, the temperature of a lovers skin, the abrupt chilling of a mood) lodged themselves in my consciousness long after.Shruti Swamy is one of the most gifted, excitingly unpredictable writers working today.
Mimi Lok, author ofLast of Her Name

Shruti'sSwamy'sThe Archercombinesexquisite prose with a kind of rare narrative propulsion. I found myself reading slower and slower, to make the sentences last even longer. By the end I was exhilarated and deeply moved.The Archeris a flat-out gorgeous piece of work.
Peter Orner, author ofMaggie Brown Others

Author Bio

Shruti Swamy is the author of the story collection,A House Is a Body, which was a finalist for the Pen/Robert Bingham Prize, the L.A. Times Book Prize for First Fiction, and longlisted for the Story Prize. Her work has been published by theParis Review,McSweeneys, and anthologized in theO. Henry PrizeStories. Herdebut novel,The Archer, will be published by Algonquin Books in September 2021.She lives in San Francisco.

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