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About the author
Sushovon Saha
<br><strong>Sushovon Saha is a chronicler of the unsaid — the pause before a farewell, the letter that stayed in the drawer, the echo of laughter in an empty courtyard.</strong><br>An engineer by education and a storyteller by instinct, he writes not to invent but to remember — to honour the delicate truths tucked between ordinary moments.<br>His debut collection, <strong>Paper Moons & Mango Trees</strong>, is a sweeping tribute to five decades of India’s emotional geography — from fading telegrams and single-screen theatres to the quiet revolutions unfolding in alleys, hostels, tea stalls, and forgotten towns. Through fifteen deeply-felt stories, Sushovon invites readers into a world where memory lingers like the aftertaste of childhood lassi — familiar, tender, and aching with time.<br>His second book, <strong>Ledger of Little Revolutions: 30 Tales of Laughter, Grace & Gentle Wisdom</strong>, extends this delicate archive of human experience. Across thirty stories set in courtyards, spice markets, verandahs, footbridges, riverbanks, and rooftops from Kolkata to Tezpur, Jaipur to Aizawl, Munnar to Rishikesh, he captures the quiet heroism of everyday kindness — the gardener who mends quarrels with flowers, the librarian whose umbrella returns with secrets, the ferryman who keeps his lamp burning a little longer.<br>It is a testament to the idea that the smallest human gesture can tilt a day, a life, or an entire world gently toward the light.<br>Rooted in a deep love for postboxes, old guesthouses, train journeys, mango seasons, and the slow rituals of small-town India, Sushovon’s writing is an intimate archive of the nation’s vanishing textures — <strong>the rustle behind the roar</strong>.<br><strong>When not writing, he can be found humming long-lost songs from the Doordarshan era, or standing still under a tree, listening to memory like it’s a half-remembered tune…</strong><br>
