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Saudha International Literature Festival | Manzu Islam | Godzilla & The Song Bird - Book launch
Kobi Nazrul Centre, 30 Hanbury Street, London, E1 6QR
Saturday 14 June 2025 at 17:30
The festival preaches the art and beauty of imagination, languages from different cultural heritages through talks, reading, performances.
This is part of Saudha's critically acclaimed literature Festival that contemplates on re-reading/ re-interpreting the works of literary giants of the world and explores the philosophical insights on many unconventional literary themes and movements through reading, performances, poetry-theatres, talks etc.
Curated by T M Ahmed Kaysher, this session mainly focuses on book-Lunch for a very powerful fiction with extremely unique, original and intriguing storytelling called GODZILLA AND THE SONG BIRD by an acclaimed British Asian fictionist Manzu Islam.
Manzu Islam was born in East Pakistan (later Bangladesh) where he lived through the 1971 war, walking the swamps for weeks to reach the refugee camps in India, then returning to fight as a freedom fighter. He came to England as a political refugee and, after studying for a degree and working as a racial harassment officer in East London, he became interested in writing. He has a doctorate and taught at the University of Gloucestershire, specialising in postcolonial literature and creative writing. He has written four earlier books including The Mapmakers of Spitalfields (1997), an anthology of short stories set both in Bangladesh and the East End, Burrow (2004) about an illegal immigrant in East London and The Song of our Swampland (2011).
His writing grows out of his memories of Bangladesh and the experience of working as a racial harassment officer in East London at the height of the National Front provoked epidemic of ‘Paki-bashing’ which terrorised the lives of many Bangladeshis and other Asians in the area. Experiences from these years fed into the stories in The Mapmakers of Spitalfields, which reflect both the trauma of racism, but also the creativity and achievement of Bangladeshis remaking their lives in Britain. Equally, the stories that reflect on memories of Bangladesh focus both on the bloody atrocities of the civil war which brought Bangladesh independence from Pakistan and of a rich culture which sustains the exiled imagination in the deepest ways.
He is also the author of a non fiction book, The Ethics of Travel: from Marco Polo to Kafka (Manchester University Press, 1996) which explores the question: how is it possible for us to encounter those who are different from us - racially, culturally and geographically - and what are the consequences of such encounters?
Kobi Nazrul Centre has been offered as support in kind by Tower Hamlet Council.
Registration link:
Venue: From Jun 14, 2025 to Jun 14, 2025 in Kobi Nazrul Centre, 30 Hanbury Street, London, E1 6QR