[literally a type of red cloth] (1948) was Syed Waliullah’s first and most famous novel. Like his other two later novels,
Chander Amabasya[
Night of No Moon] (1964) and
Kando Nadi Kando[
Cry,
River,
Cry] (1968),
Lal Saluis set in rural Bengal. Eastern Bengal, now Bangladesh, is dotted with
mazaars, shrines of Muslim saints, some known, others unknown. These shrines are draped with red cloth. In the early 1940s, when Waliullah lived with his father in Mymensingh, he would often pass one such shrine and this inspired him to write
Lal Salu. Initially published by Comrade Publishers in Calcutta,
Lal Saluwas subsequently published in Dhaka, East Pakistan, and continues to be published, often in a collection of his three novels, in Bangladesh.
Lal Salu narrates the story of
1653 words
Citation: Zaman, Niaz. "Lal Salu". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 16 February 2021 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=39288, accessed 23 November 2024.]