The city famous for standing at the confluence of the Ganga, Yamuna and the mythical Saraswati, then, is the fulcrum and the canvas for Gour in "Allahabad Aria" (Rupa Books) and she paints a picture of multi-coloured hues that reflect not just a physical and social geography but seek to provide a depth, too, to the human landscape, seeped in history and touched by a tinge of melancholy and nostalgia.
Gour has several illustrious predecessors she can look to who have compiled similar volumes on the life of a single city; the name that comes to mind most instantly being that of James Joyce and his 'Dubliners'. Like the Irish author and his exposition of the inscrutable ways of the Irish metropolis, Gour too conjures something of an enigma of Allahabad.
His story, and that of his faithful eldest wife, the Princess Begham Ain-e-Raushnaq, presented in 'The Paan Woman of Khusrau Bagh', speaks of the rebellion of the eldest son of the fourth Mughal emperor against his father and the terrible punishment that was visited upon him and gives a glimpse of courtly intrigue of the Mughal durbar as seen through the eyes of its eponymous protagonist, who finds favour with the high princess because of a charm she knows for captivating one's partner.
