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The
dynamic tapestry of contemporary India comes alive in the pages of Tantric
Picnic: Tales of India by Dutch writer Hans Plomp. With humour and
warmth the author chronicles this country of paradox, where the ancient
and modern, the splendid and the sordid, endlessly collide. Carving a
route well off the beaten path, Plomp probes the heart of India —
the holy fools, village life, legends and myths, ruins and bazaars, the
sway of tradition and the tug of modernity. With the steady, compassionate
gaze of a pilgrim he notes the ironies and also the miracles of India
today, in memorable tales certain to delight both the experienced and
armchair traveler.
India is a time
machine where travelers encounter realities and cultures that people in
the West know only from history, mythology and fairy tales…
From the Introduction
Hans Plomp was born
in Amsterdam in 1944. After his studies he became a teacher, but he gave
up regular jobs for good when his first novel De Ondertrouw (The
Banns Are Up) was successful. He took an active part in the playful
Dutch Provo Revolution of the Sixties, which made Amsterdam one of the
hippest places on the planet. Hans Plomp has traveled extensively, especially
in India, where he spent some five years. In 1982 he toured the U.S. with
a group of Dutch poets, performing with Anne Waldman, Diana di Prima,
Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso, Amiri Baraka, Ira Cohen and many other
kindred artists. He has published novels, short stories, poetry and essays.
Some of his English poems were published in City Lights Pocket Poets Series
#42: Nine Dutch Poets.
Born and raised in
the Rocky Mountains of British Columbia, Jordan Zinovich has lived in
Crete, England, France, Guinea Conakry, Holland, India, Spain, and New
York City, where he now resides. He has published seven books: The Prospector:
North of Sixty and Battling the Bay, two historical biographies regarding
the opening of the western Canadian north; the critical anthology Semiotext(e)
CANADAs; Gabriel Dumont in Paris; The Company I Keep, Cobweb Walking,
collections of poetry; and the radio play John Chapman’s Harvest.
His work has been translated into French and Dutch, with radio performances
in New York and Amsterdam. At present he is a senior editor with the Autonomedia
Collective, one of North America’s most notable underground publishing
houses.
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