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PN Review 281
Featured Article Picture of Sujata Bhatt
from Appa Stories Sujata Bhatt Mosquitoes

Appa has warned the children about mosquitoes, but they are not impressed. They’re afraid of bats and snakes, not mosquitoes. After Appa has finished speaking, the children ask him to say ‘mosquito’ again.

The children enjoy asking Appa to say ‘mosquito’; he pronounces it ‘moss-quito’, which makes them laugh. Already the children have a different accent when they speak English. But no matter how much English they learn, they will always call their father ‘Appa’.


Bats and Snakes

Now, Appa stands in the veranda, the indigo sky behind him, he is about to enter the house. The children are restless beside him; he urges them to go indoors, away from the mosquitoes.

Appa doesn’t know that the children have just escaped from the bats, or so they feel. The children have a special zigzag way of running, which, they believe, not only protects them from bats, but also from snakes. Once again, this evening, the children feel that the bats would ... read more
Borges, Recursion and the Multiverse Some Reflections
Richard Gwyn In his essay ‘When Fiction Lives in Fiction’ (1939), Borges states that he can trace his first notion of the problem of infinity to a large biscuit tin that lent ‘mystery and vertigo’ to his childhood. ‘On the side of this unusual object,’ he writes, ‘there was a Japanese scene; I cannot remember the children or warriors depicted there, but I do remember that in a corner of that image the same biscuit tin reappeared with the same picture, and within it the same picture again, and so on (at least, potentially) into infinity...’1

This childhood experience of Borges’s, in turn, evokes the vertigo the reader might feel before the various mysteries and labyrinths, the doublings and redoublings, and the recursive modes of narration that populate so many of the author’s stories. And it is this notion of recursion (or recurrent self-referentiality) that I wish to address ... read more
Three Poems
Tara Bergin The Process

Everything starts in the field – some thistles, say, or a bunch of moss.
These get reformed into bandages. Then spitting cloths.
Then the ragman turns the spitting cloths into paper.

Enter me, the ‘maker’.

I purchase paper from the ragman by the hundred sheet pack.
I fill every sheet front and back, then I place the sheets in stacks
for the Nightmen.

When the Nightmen come they buy my jottings for a decent sum.
They don’t read them. No need.
They twist the paper into wrappings for tobacco, weed –
... read more
Selected from the Archive...
Three Poems Fleur Adcock Three Poems


RICHEY

My great-grandfather Richey Brooks
began in mud, at Moneymore:
'A place of mud and nothing else'
he called it (not the way it looks,
but what lies under those green hills?)
Emigrated in '74;
ended in Drury; mud again -
slipped in the duckrun at ninety-three
... read more
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