
Signal Red: Remounted (Antisense Universe Book 1)
Release Date: Wednesday, January 15th, 2025
Published by: Rimi B. Chatterjee
Pages: 266 pages
In 'Signal Red: Remounted,' Rimi B. Chatterjee revamps her original novel with new characters and scenes, exploring a solarpunk subplot set in a chilling future India that reflects on societal fears and challenges.
Available At
Full Description
This is a completely rewritten version of my novel Signal Red, with new characters and scenes and a solarpunk subplot. I have deleted some of the more boring original passages, and brought the storyline into the Antisense Universe. It is now Book 1 of the series, where it belongs.
When the first version of this book came out in 2005, India was at the height of liberalisation fever. Young girls in miniskirts thronged the cities by night, cosmopolitan in one hand and Jimmy Choos in the other—or at least, that's what the novelists of that time would have you believe. Nobody wanted gloom and doom stories about a grim future India in which fascism has triumphed. It could never happen here, right? Right?
Three years previous to publishing Signal Red, I had been working at IIT Kharagpur. In 2002, the chilly shadow of that soon-to-be India fell upon our shoulders, though the rest of the country barely shivered. Some of the other faculty at the Institute expressed their fears about what they suspected would come next. They painted for me a chilling picture of the choices they would face when the shadow eventually shortened, as we always knew it would.
When the first version of this book came out in 2005, India was at the height of liberalisation fever. Young girls in miniskirts thronged the cities by night, cosmopolitan in one hand and Jimmy Choos in the other—or at least, that's what the novelists of that time would have you believe. Nobody wanted gloom and doom stories about a grim future India in which fascism has triumphed. It could never happen here, right? Right?
Three years previous to publishing Signal Red, I had been working at IIT Kharagpur. In 2002, the chilly shadow of that soon-to-be India fell upon our shoulders, though the rest of the country barely shivered. Some of the other faculty at the Institute expressed their fears about what they suspected would come next. They painted for me a chilling picture of the choices they would face when the shadow eventually shortened, as we always knew it would.