This is the story of Rukmini who is married to the District Collector of a small town in Assam, and teaches English Literature in the local college. On the surface her life is settled and safe, living in the big, beautiful bungalow on the hill above the cremation ground, seemingly untouched by the toil and sufferings of the common folk below. Yet each time there is an ‘incident’ in the district, the fear and uncertainty that grips the town is reflected in her own life. The violent insurgency that grips Assam runs like a dark river through the novel and forms its backdrop.
The Assam students’ agitation of the 1970s and 1980s that began as a movement for self-determination has grown into a full blown insurgency. Kidnappings, extortion and political instability are the order of the day. The issue of illegal migration from across the border has spread mistrust and bitterness among the people of the region and Rukmini’s world is pervaded by this ever-present threat of violence. The meaninglessness of it all, the complexities that divide ‘them’ and ‘us’ and the point at which the two merge are all explored in this powerful novel.
The final dénouement is horrifying and yet true—for there can be no other ‘end’ to such a tale, where the personal is so densely interwoven with the political.
"A powerful read..." -Sahara Times
"...a confident and enormously accomplished debut. It is written in a prose which is clear yet delicate and evocative" —Biblio
"Mitra Phukan’s fiction can do what official action has not done – make the North-east accessible to rest of India." —Hindustan Times
"The Collector’s Wife will go a long way in filling a vacuum in the sphere of English writing by Assamese authors" —Assam Tribune
"Phukan deals pertinently and with forthrightness with real political issues...succeeds in what seems to have been her primary aim: to give her reader a rattling good read, and plenty to think about while reading it" —Statesman