Available online and in major brick and mortar stores across the Indian Subcontinent, Malaysia and Singapore. Publisher for the region: Hachette India. 2024.

Order from Thuprai.com (Nepal), Amazon.in (India) and Abebooks.com (US). These are not endorsements.

BLURB

In the misty foothills of Torikhola, Kanchhi, the only child of her mother, Maiju, refuses to play by the stifling rules of her hamlet. She befriends boys, writes letters to them, and opposes the shame imposed on her swelling ambitions and curiosity. There is a life beyond the forlorn valleys and gorges, and Kanchhi is intrigued by the possibilities. One cold November morning she leaves home – with two bags and some millet bread Maiju prepares for her. That, however, is the last anybody sees of her.

Now, a decade after Kanchhi’s puzzling disappearance, echoes of her defiance grow thin. Life has moved on. For one, the civil war has arrived at the hamlet’s doorstep. And yet, much has remained still. Maiju lights a lamp in front of the gods and feverishly prays for her daughter’s return. And the villagers, uncertain of what befell Kanchhi, continue to debate. Did she run off, chasing the highs and lights of the big city? Or did the cruelties of the ongoing civil war engulf her whole?

In this impressively sure-footed debut, Weena Pun brings to life the political and social tremors stirring the valleys of Nepal at the turn of the millennium, as well as the tenacious, tragedy-riven women of the time. A delicate and finely wrought saga, Kanchhi is an intimate exploration of vulnerable girlhood in turbulent territories.

ADVANCE PRAISE

Kanchhi is a tender swirl of a novel, a rich multisensory immersion into the world of rural Nepal. As the Maoist uprising stirs up political rebellion, the novel follows the coming-of-age of the high-spirited protagonist as she and her single mother negotiate the myriad limitations enforced on them by their society. Weena Pun writes with exceptional intimacy and grace about the emotional and intellectual quests of girls and women. Kanchhi is a major work – a gem.’

– Manjushree Thapa, author of Forget Kathmandu

‘A brilliant novel by Weena Pun, where words are chosen with love. The poetic language shakes you to the core. This is not just the story of one Kanchhi; as you read, many Kanchhis begin chasing you. In the end, the story rips your heart apart like a razor blade.’

– Buddhisagar, author of Karnali Blues

‘What lovely and lively characters from a lonely village by the millet fields. A new and authentic voice from a western mountainside!’

– Narayan Wagle, author of Palpasa Café

‘Kanchhi by Weena Pun is a lyrical and heart-stopping literary debut from the Nepali-origin author. With masterful storytelling strokes, Pun traces the consequences of a woman daring to overturn society’s expectations. Atmospheric, tragic, and deeply resonant with the times, Kanchhi evokes parallels to Farah Bashir’s Rumours of Spring and Madhuri Vijay’s The Far Field.’

– Debut Books to Watch Out for 2024, Platform Desk, Platform-mag.com

PRESS

Financial Express:Best books to read over the week” (Book mention)

Nepali Times:A Tale of Resilience” (Book Review)

Scroll.in:October fiction: Five Indian books and a Nepali novel to read in this festive month” (Book mention)

The Kathmandu Post:Challenging gender norms through literature” (Interview)

Kalam Weekly:Tender, Lyrical, Resonant” (Book Review)

Scroll.in:Fiction: Did Kanchhi escape to the city from her village in Nepal, or did the civil war claim her?” (Book excerpt)

Frontline:Lost in the Himalayas” (Book Review)

The Telegraph:The long wait” (Book Review)

Nagarik: “दस वर्षमा यसरी जन्मिन् कान्छी” (Author profile and book feature)

Himal Southasian: “Weena Pun on the invisibility of women in Nepal’s society and literature: Southasia Review of Books podcast #15” (Podcast)

Warning: Spoilers in the review: Online Khabar: “एक्ली आमाकी अटेरी छोरी” (Review)

How’d You Create That?: “Bringing my grandmother’s village to fiction ft. Weena Pun” (Podcast)

Bookmark, Times of India: “Kanchhi: A Journey Through Time and Tradition in Nepal.” (Podcast). Excerpts at: “Kanchhi: A Tale of Disappearance and Hope in Nepal.”

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Kanchhi is represented by Kanishka Gupta of Writer’s Side.