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Anand's literary career was launched by family tragedy, instigated by the rigidity of the caste system. His first prose essay was a response to the suicide of an aunt, who had been excommunicated by his family for sharing a meal with a Muslim. His first major novel, Untouchable, published in 1935, was a chilling exposé of the day-to-day life of a member of India's Untouchable caste. It is the story of a single day in the life of Bakha, a toilet-cleaner, who accidentally bumps into a member of a higher caste.
This simple book, which captured the puissance of the Punjabi and Hindi idiom in English was widely acclaimed and Anand won the reputation of being India's Charles Dickens. The introduction was written by his friend, E. M. Forster, whom he met while working on T. S. Eliot's magazine Criterion. In it Forster writes, "Avoiding rhetoric and circumlocution, it has gone straight to the heart of its subject and purified it."
In Anand's second novel, Coolie (1936), he continues to describe the plight of India's poor by telling of a fifteen-year-old girl, trapped in servitude as a child laborer, who eventually dies of tuberculosis. Two Leaves and a Bud (1937) describes an exploited peasant, who is killed while trying to protect his daughter from being raped by a British colonial official.
Inevitably, Anand, who spent half his time in London and half in India, was drawn to the Indian independence movement. At the same time, he also supported freedom elsewhere around the globe and even traveled to Spain to volunteer in the Spanish Civil War. He spent World War II in London, working as a scriptwriter for the BBC.
Anand returned to India in 1946, and continued with his prodigious literary output there. His work includes poetry and essay on a wide range of subjects, as well as autobiographies and novels. Prominent among his novels are The Village (1939), Across the Black Waters (1940), The Sword and the Sickle (1942), all written in England, and the The Private Life of an Indian Prince (1953), perhaps the most important of his works written in India. He also founded a literary magazine, Marg, and taught in various universities.
His later works, including the novel Private Life of an Indian Prince, were more autobiographical in nature, and in 1950 Anand embarked on a project to write a seven-part autobiography, beginning with Seven Summers. One part, Morning Face (1968) won him the National Academy Award. Like much of his later work, it contains elements of his spiritual journey as he struggles to attain a higher sense of self-awareness.