When does Excellence overshadow Excellence?
How do you measure achievement over achievement?
Something great over
something great that occurred previously?
Sisyphus may provide a
preliminary answer…that greatness is an ongoing, repetitive task, possibly
never fully achieved…close but not accomplished. The achievement is in the
ongoing effort to reach an impossible goal, possibly undefined.
So, I repeat a question
that I always have put out there. Where am I going with an opinionated
statement?
Here is the simple answer.
Anita Nahal.
An aaduna contributor,
Dr. Nahal has re-burst on the literary scene and may have overshadowed her
previous work with a current intensity of creative thought that has continued
to evolve and has become enrichened by her diversity in content with
simultaneously published work.
Her new works reflect her
expansive creative thought and diverse multiplicity of spirit and innate,
welcoming ability to weave words and themes into vibrant fabrics of literary
wonder.
·
Hey...Spilt milk is spilt, nothing else (a collection of poems)
For readers in India: http://www.amazon.in/dp/B07K3QYMHN
· Life On
The Go, Flash Fictions from New Delhi to America, Vol 1
(a collection of flash fictions)
For readers outside of India: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B07K3R3BR1
For readers in India: http://www.amazon.in/dp/B07K3R3BR1
And you do not have to take my word for it.
Her recent books have been noted as required reading for a course on “The
Multicultural Society” under the section, ‘Voices from within- the literary
voice of migration & acculturation’ by the University of Utrecht’s
Department of Interdisciplinary Sciences, Faculty of Social Sciences in The
Netherlands.
What did I mention about
achievement overcoming and surpassing achievement?!
You decide.
****
Anita Nahal, Ph.D., CDP, is
a poet, flash fiction writer, children's books author, D&I consultant and
professor. Her first collection of poems, Initiations was published in
1988 by Pitamber, New Delhi, and three children’s books were published by
Madhuban-Vikas, New Delhi between 1993-1995. You can find her recent works in Aberration
Labyrinth, Confluence, Better Than Starbucks, aaduna, River
Poets Journal, and Colere. Nahal received an honorable mention in
the Concrete Wolf 2017 chapbook competition. A second book of poetry and
Nahal’s first collection of flash fiction are due for release
later this year, and she is busy working on her first novella. Currently, Nahal
is an adjunct professor at the Chicago School of Professional Psychology,
Washington DC. Some of Nahal’s former positions include: Mellon Fellowship
program administrator, Smithsonian National Museum of African American History
and Culture, Washington DC; assistant provost for International Programs,
Howard University, Washington DC; visiting associate professor of History at
SUNY, Binghamton, New York; and associate professor of History, Sri
Venkateswara College, University of Delhi, India. Dr. Nahal has been a visiting
scholar of gender at the University of California, Berkeley, and a Fulbright
Scholar-in-Residence, SUNY, Binghamton, NY. Nahal is the daughter of the
Sahitya Akademi award winning Indian novelist and professor, Dr. Chaman Nahal
and Dr. Sudarshna Nahal who was principal of a K-12 school. {Both parents
are deceased.} Anita resides in the U.S. with her son, Vikrant and
daughter-in-law, Sumona.
Here are thoughts from other third-party critics and observers:
Folks say Anita Nahal’s poems reflect a, “…sense of imagination that goes beyond traditional and contemporary
poetic bounds.” That they have “…lyrical
quality and soothe the soul,” and are like “whispers to the heart.”
And, about her flash fictions folks say, “captivating,” “gripping,”
“deeply sensitive,” “short, sweet and deep,” “adorable,” and “leaving
them speechless!” Nahal, they say, has the passion of poignant story
telling, making people actually visualise them, and having a “been present
in the story effect!”
Nahal’s poems and flash
fictions cover myriad issues such as immigration, race, ethnicity, womanhood,
single motherhood, unemployment, teenage pregnancy, gender, color, age, love,
divorce, motherhood, fatherhood, homelessness, and cross-cultural surprises,
and shocks. Diaspora elements are strongly present in Nahal’s writings.
Nahal’s writings roam in the realm of thoughts, feelings, dreams, daydreaming, and universalistic unplanned moments…very ethereal, airy and magical at times! Her poems and flash fictions touch your heart… some will make you laugh, some will make you think, and some might even make you cry.
Anita Nahal’s poems and
flash fictions are extremely valuable contributions to the literature on
immigration and diaspora writings. I absolutely recommend this, her second
collection of poems, as uniquely insightful, with a warm empathy for the human
condition. Anita is a combination of a social scientist / historian / cultural
/ human analyst…a culture broker with diverse experiences…being somewhere but
from somewhere else, sharing a rich nomadic perspective - a genre hopper /
mixer! And Nahal writes more so with a keen eye for everyday encounters, like
Humans of New York - weaving tapestries of historical/social facts with
existential issues and ilemma's that should resonate with all audiences. ~ Dr.
Gerrit B.M. Dielissen, Professor of Interdisciplinary Social Science, Utrecht
University, Netherlands
Anita’s poems and flash
fiction are very relevant literary contributions as she immerses herself in her
characters taking us most intriguingly with them in the journey of soulful,
everyday life discovery! This is her second collection of poetry, and with this
she strongly establishes herself as a reputed poet in English and Diaspora
writings. The pencil images in most of the poems lend visual beauty to Nahal’s
work, and her poems are incisive reflections on human existence. ~ Dr. Roopali
Sircar Gaur, Former Professor of English, Sri Venkateswara College, University
of Delhi
Anita Nahal's poems and
very short stories are like whispers of my heart! The details are in some case
left to the imagination of the reader, and in some cases, graphic and so
vivid...as if I am there! Anita's work reminds me of her father, and my
Professor Chaman Nahal, the novelist par excellence. ~Satya Narain Sharma,
Former Associate Professor of English, University of Delhi
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