@booklet {9587, title = {The Island of Lost Girls}, year = {2015}, month = {2015}, publisher = {Hachette, India}, address = {Gurgaon, India}, abstract = {

Sequel to 2008 Padmanabhan in which the girl and her father hve escaped India and live of the Island of Lost Girls, where they are having difficulties adapting to the modern world and the girl is having to learn what it means to be a woman.

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {6127, title = {Escape}, year = {2008}, month = {2008}, publisher = {Picador}, address = {New Delhi, India}, abstract = {

Feminist dystopia of a world with no females and the difficulties of the one girl born.\ See 2015 Padmanabhan for a sequel.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {8584, title = {"India 2099"}, howpublished = {In a special issue entitled India 999-1999 Millennium Special of Outlook (New Delhi)}, volume = {no. 44}, year = {1999}, note = {

Rpt. as \“2099.\” In her Kleptomania. Ten Stories (New Delhi, India: Penguin Books India, 2004), 149-60.

}, month = {November 15, 1999}, pages = {180, 182, 185}, abstract = {

Future of India that has been changed first by two atomic bombs, then by Indians establishing space colonies which transform the remaining parts of India into an apparent eutopia.

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, url = {http://www.outlookindia.com/article/india-2099/208405}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {9728, title = {Harvest}, year = {1998}, note = {

Rpt. in Black and Asian Plays (London: Aurora Metro Books/The Peggy Ramsay Foundation, 2000), 10-89. A standalone version of the play with unauthorized cuts was published by the same publisher in 2003. Rev. in Postcolonial Plays: An Anthology. Ed. Helen Gilbert (London: Routledge, 2011), 217-249, with an editor\’s \“Introduction\” (214-216). Rev \& exp. ed. Gurgram, India: Hachette India, 2017 with a new introduction by the author (unpaged); and Wadsworth Anthology of Drama. Ed. W[illiam] B. Worthen. 6th ed. (Boston, MA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2011), 1727-1755.

}, month = {1998}, publisher = {Kali for Women}, address = {Delhi, India}, abstract = {

Dystopian play focusing on the sale of body parts by the poor to the rich.

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {8572, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Essence of Gandhi{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {New Internationalist Magazine}, volume = {no. 293}, year = {1997}, note = {

Rpt. as \“Gandhi-Toxin.\” In her Kleptomania. Ten Stories (New Delhi, India: Penguin Books India, 2004), 91-98.

}, month = {August 1997}, abstract = {

Satire on genetic manipulation that begins in a dystopia that controls all genes and then moves toward a eutopia based on the genes of Gandhi.

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, url = {http://newint.org/features/1997/08/05/gandhi/ }, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {8899, title = {"Stolen Hours"}, howpublished = {Hot Death, Cold Soup: Twelve Short Stories}, year = {1996}, note = {

Rpt. (Reading, Eng.: Garnet Publishing, 1997), 169-83.\ 

}, month = {1996}, pages = {188-204}, publisher = {Kali for Women}, address = {New Delhi, India}, abstract = {

The setting of a science fiction story is a dystopia of rigid class distinction based on ethnicity and immigration .

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {8836, title = {{\textquotedblleft}A Government of India undertaking . . .{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Imprint (Bombay, India)}, volume = {24.1}, year = {1984}, note = {

Rpt. in In Other Words: New Writing by Indian Women. Ed. Urvashi Butalia and Ritu Menon (Delhi, India: Kali for Women, 1992), 1-24. \ U.K. ed. (London: The Women\’s Press, 1993), 1-24; U.S. ed. (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1994), 1-24. Rpt. in Critical Quarterly 35.4 (December 1993): 66-79;\ in her Hot Death, Cold Soup: Twelve Short Stories (Delhi, India: Kali for Women, 1996), 111-32. Rpt. (Reading, Eng.: Garnet Publishing, 1997), 99-117; and in her Three Virgins and Other Stories (New Delhi, India: Zubaan, 2013), 17-38.\ 

}, month = {April 1984}, pages = {88-93, 95-96}, abstract = {

Dystopian Kafkaesque satire focusing on the \“Bureau of Reincarnation and Transmigration of Souls--A Government of India Undertaking.\”\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} } @booklet {8573, title = {{\textquotedblleft}Sharing Air{\textquotedblright}}, howpublished = {Kleptomania. Ten Stories }, year = {1984}, note = {

Originally published in the Sunday Express (New Delhi). Rpt. in The Pioneer (New Delhi) (February 28, 1997); and in The Big Book of Science Fiction: The Ultimate Collection. Ed. Ann and Jeff VanderMeer (New York: Vintage Crime/Black Lizard Vintage Books, 2016), 925-27 with an editors\’ note on 924 giving the date of publication as 1984 but without any indication of where.\ 

}, month = {[1984?]/2004}, pages = {83-90}, publisher = {Penguin Books India}, address = {New Delhi, India}, abstract = {

Dystopia in the future in which everyone has to breathe air from tanks, and all the trees are gone.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, Indian author}, author = {Manjula Padmanabhan (b. 1953)} }