Abdullah Khan: The Banker-Novelist of Bihar and His Realist Portrayal of Ordinary Lives
Published Date: 02-09-2025 Issue: Vol. 1 No. 4 (2025): september - October 2025 Published Paper : Download
Abstract- Abdullah Khan, an Indian novelist and scriptwriter, has emerged as a distinctive voice in contemporary Indian English literature through his nuanced portrayals of small-town life, middle-class precarity, and the tensions between aspiration and social boundaries. Born in Pandari, near Motihari in Bihar, and trained as a chemist before pursuing a professional career in banking, Khan represents a dual identity that informs his fiction: the precision and patience of a banker and the empathy and imagination of a storyteller. His debut novel Patna Blues (2018) is widely regarded as a landmark in its portrayal of Arif Khan, a young Muslim aspirant to the civil services whose struggles reflect broader questions of class, communal identity, family duty, and forbidden love. Translated into multiple Indian languages and Arabic, the novel’s reception testifies to its resonance across cultural and national boundaries. His second work, A Man from Motihari (2023), expands his thematic scope by weaving the personal journey of a bank clerk aspiring to be a writer with echoes of George Orwell and postcolonial questions of destiny, migration, and artistic identity. With Patna Redux slated for release in 2025, Khan continues to consolidate his position as a writer of perseverance and literary clarity. His work resists melodrama, focusing instead on the quiet struggles of ordinary lives, the fragile balances between duty and desire, and the dignity of resilience in the face of systemic odds. This paper examines Abdullah Khan’s literary contribution as an author whose art demonstrates how patience, persistence, and deeply humane observation transform everyday experiences into narratives of enduring significance.
Keywords: Abdullah Khan, Patna Blues, A Man from Motihari, Indian English Literature.