Enigmatic Fiction on Pregnancy and Childlessness

‘White Dancing Elephants’ by Chaya Bhuvaneswar

Tucker Lieberman
3 min readMay 21, 2024

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book cover of WHITE DANCING ELEPHANTS which superimposes the title on a woman’s face
From the author’s website

Four years ago, I wrote about Chaya Bhuvaneswar’s short story collection White Dancing Elephants (Dzanc Books, 2018). The website that published my remarks has gone offline, so I’m reposting them here.

The magical realist stories of ‘White Dancing Elephants’

A number of these stories focus on pregnancies that are illicit, fraught with danger, sadly lost, or merely wistfully imagined and on hoped-for children as seductive ghosts who lure women and men to their fates. The power of this theme, combined with Dr. Bhuvaneswar’s glittering sentences, led me to read the collection several times from beginning to end.

Some stories are on the theme of childlessness. The first story, from which the book takes its title, is in the voice of a woman speaking to her small, miscarried embryo (“only enough blood for me to know”), an ephemeral being she generously imagines would have grown into a man who one day would have had a son of his own. “The Life You Save Isn’t Your Own” is about a fortysomething art collector, a divorcee who feels sadness in the solitary life she’s made for herself. “Heitor” is about Indian slaves in Portugal five hundred years ago facing life-and-death choices…

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Tucker Lieberman

Editor for Prism & Pen and for Identity Current. Author of the novel "Most Famous Short Film of All Time." tuckerlieberman.com