One of the most anticipated books of the year, Lahiri's first novel (after 1999's Pulitzer Prize–winning Interpreter of Maladies) amounts to less than the sum of its parts. Hopscotching across 25 ...
Lahiri's move to Italy inspired her Italian-language writing and Roman Stories, embracing a new "geographical multiverse" for ...
The brouhaha over immigration - with all of the shouting about Dreamers, deportations, walls, and bad words for troubled places - strikes Jhumpa Lahiri especially hard. The British-born, ...
Readers, including the author Jhumpa Lahiri, respond to the Barnard president’s guest essay about speakers at universities. Also: The benefits of trees. The museum said the Pulitzer Prize-winning ...
Never felt safe anywhere: Jhumpa Lahiri on not belonging, otherness of languages and idea of home ...
NEW YORK (AP) — The next book from Jhumpa Lahiri, the Pulitzer Prize-winning fiction writer, will highlight her work as a translator. Princeton University Press announced Monday that Lahiri's ...
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly speaks with author Jhumpa Lahiri about her unusual use of place in her new novel, Whereabouts, which she first wrote in Italian and translated herself into English. Pulitzer ...
Jhumpa Lahiri is best known for her fictional stories about immigration; novels that usually explore themes that arise from living in between two worlds. In her new book of essays, Translating Myself ...
Jhumpa Lahiri is not at home, but she is not out of place either. The eldest daughter of a generation of Indians and Bengalis who moved out of India in the ’60s into the New World, Lahiri found ...
AS LATE-FALL AFTERNOON light floods the high-ceilinged living room of Jhumpa Lahiri’s brownstone in Fort Greene, Brooklyn, the author exudes an outward stillness that in other circumstances might be ...