It was 2015, and the world around me was becoming heavier, louder, more digital, more divided — all at once. I craved a book that could cut through the noise without pretending the world wasn’t messy.
That’s when I met The Collected Short Stories of Khushwant Singh. Not stumbled upon, not “discovered,” but met — like you meet a particularly blunt uncle at a family gathering who smells of Old Spice, speaks his mind, and has no filter, but damn, if he doesn’t tell the truth.
Khushwant Singh didn’t just speak to me — he grabbed me by the collar, smirked, and said, “Come, let’s talk about the India you know and the India you’d rather not.”
What followed was a slow, layered reading over many months. I didn’t devour the stories — I lived with them. Some stayed on my desk for days. Others crept into my head on public buses. One or two followed me to bed.
And what a world Singh lays bare. In these 30-odd stories, he draws up an India that’s at once familiar and foreign: the mud-slicked lanes of a partition-torn Punjab; the dimly lit offices of pompous civil servants; the cold compartments of first-class railway cars where Westernized Indians sip brandy and speak in clipped accents; the overstuffed city buses where hands stray, and shame is passed around like spare change.
If I had to pick one story that has lived inside me since that first read, it would be The Mark of Vishnu. A simple tale on the surface — a schoolboy, a snake, a devout servant — but its undercurrents cut deep. The clash of reason and belief, the grotesque comedy of blind ritual, the dignity of the marginalized, and the fragility of truth. It’s a story I’ve returned to more times than I care to admit, each time peeling off another layer.
Then there’s Karma, a story so short, so snappy, that I initially mistook it for a joke. But read it twice — and it becomes a tragedy wrapped in satire. The man who performs his Westernization like a theatre act, only to be publicly undressed by his own delusions — it’s pure Singh: ironic, brutal, and utterly brilliant.
What’s remarkable about Singh’s fiction is how it never tries too hard to impress. He doesn’t dress up his sentences in velvet. His prose is lean, journalistic, and sharp — the kind that gives paper cuts if you’re not paying attention. He trusts you to get the joke, the pain, the politics. He doesn’t sermonize. He winks. And you, the reader, either laugh or flinch.
Of course, not every story lands. Some, like Wanted: A Wife or The Bottom-Pincher, edge dangerously close to parody, and not always in a flattering way. At times, Singh’s obsession with libido can feel like a tired reflex — the nudge-nudge of a writer who got too comfortable making readers blush. And yes, his female characters don’t always rise above types — seductress, servant, saint. But even in these moments, Singh is honest. He writes the India he saw — flawed, complex, lewd, spiritual, cruel, loving.
Years later, I still reach for this collection when I need a jolt — when I want to be reminded that literature needn’t always be lofty to be profound. Singh’s stories wear no masks. They spill their guts — caste, class, communal rage, repression, absurdity — all laid out in broad daylight. But they do so with humor and heart. And that’s what makes them linger.
The Riot, for instance, should be mandatory reading in any course on communal violence. Its restraint is its weapon. And The Portrait of a Lady, Singh’s tender homage to his grandmother, could soften even the most hard-boiled cynic. It’s a story that smells of old prayer books, ghee lamps, and fading memory.
There’s comfort in returning to this book — not because the stories are always pleasant, but because they’re true. Not factually, but emotionally. And emotional truth — raw, unfiltered, and fearless — is what Singh dealt in best.
Now, in 2025, a full decade since that first reading, The Collected Short Stories of Khushwant Singh remains on my shelf, within reach. Sometimes I pull it out just to reread a page. Other times, just to touch the cover and remember who I was when I first met these stories.
Books grow old. We grow older. But some stories?
They become part of your blood.