Step into a world where memory smells of rain on dry earth, stories hide in railway whistles, and every emotion has a taste, a tune, and a time.
Paper Moons & Mango Trees is a deeply moving collection of 15 emotionally resonant stories set across India’s towns, teashops, train stations, courtyards, cinema halls, and hearts - spanning five decades (1975-2025). From the mustard fields of Kalinganj to the ghats of Varanasi, the piano rooms of Calcutta to the mango-seller lanes of Bhagalpur, these stories celebrate the quiet heroism of ordinary people living through extraordinary inner lives.
What if the last kachori you ate in your hometown was your final memory of it?
What if a girl could summon the monsoon with her charcoal sketches?
What if a postman delivered hope long after the world had forgotten how to wait?
Sushovon Saha writes with the tenderness of a poet and the precision of an engineer. A debut collection brimming with nostalgia, lyrical beauty, and cinematic realism, these stories embrace themes of love and loss, resilience and regret, memory and magic. With characters who linger long after the last page - a silent widow who whispers forgiveness through a letterbox, a boy who races a paper boat down the Ganga, a dancer reclaiming her rhythm in a Dharwad guesthouse - this is fiction that feels like lived truth.
The stories take you through:
A forgotten cinema in Fatehpur, where a stolen reel reveals a forbidden love
A rain-drawing girl in Kasauli, whose sketches may hold supernatural power
A postman named Raahi in Allahabad, who delivers more than just mail
A lost letter from 1983 in Bhagalpur, that finds its way home four decades later
A pianist in Calcutta, a widow in Varanasi, a runaway bride in Lucknow - all weaving a nation’s emotional landscape
Rich in detail and layered with cultural texture, Paper Moons & Mango Trees evokes the flavor of R. K. Narayan, the intimacy of Jhumpa Lahiri, and the warmth of a cup of chai shared with someone who remembers your childhood.