Train To Pakistani Train Analysis

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INTRODUCTION
Train to Pakistan written in 1956, differs from the most of the novels on the partition in respect of canvas and unity of time, place and action. It has greater unity of time and place, it action centers in the vicinity of Mano Majra and it covers a period of not more than a month. Perhaps this is an important factor that enables Khushwant Singh to transform the horrendous raw theme into a fine fiction that is steeped in human compassion and love. Train to Pakistan is a historical novel by Khushwant Singh. It recounts the Partition of India in August 1947.
Khushwant Singh’s name is bound to go down in Indian literary history as one of the finest historians and novelists, a forthright political commentator, and an outstanding observer and social critic. Train to Pakistan deals with the period …show more content…

Daily life at Mano Majra runs parallel with the systematic arrivals and departures of trains there. “All this has made Mano Majra very conscious of trains. Before daybreak, the mail train rushes through on its way to Lahore, and as it approaches the bridge the driver invariably blows two long blasts of whistle. In an instant, all Mano Majra comes awake. Crows begin to caw. The Mullah at the mosque knows that it is time for the Morning Prayer. By the time the 10.30 morning passenger train from Delhi comes in, life in Mano Majra has settled down to its dull daily routine. Men are in the fields… as the mid-day express goes by, Mano Majra stops to rest… when the evening passenger from Lahore comes in everyone gets to work again.” All this stands in contrast with the new found situation in Mano Majra with the succession of national government which finds a laconic description in the second part of the novel named “Kalyug”. The first visible effect is in the running of train that disrupts normal life of

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