A collection of five short stories and a novella by  three-time Maharashtra State Award winner for literature, Of Closures and New Beginnings explores the struggles of the modern urban Indian woman to assert her  individuality amidst societal pressures and expectations. The stories address  her predicament as she makes choices—of career versus family life, of freedom  versus bonds that tie her down, of relationships that are nameless, yet  important to her. Saniya’s characters—sharply etched, honest and startlingly  real—compel you to ponder their decisions in their quest to find themselves.
  The novella, Awartan (1996), one of Saniya’s  most intense works, explores a relationship which, for the conservative Indian  society of the 1990s, was daring and uncommon. Seen through the eyes of a young  introvert woman, it closely examines family ties, human relationships, and the  untimely death of a loved one. Her journey of coming to terms with her loss,  and understanding the meaning of love, through conflicting emotions,  introspection and distance, is depicted with a rare empathy, sensitivity and  poignancy.
  Translated flawlessly by Keerti Ramachandra, who captures  the writer’s voice and style intuitively, each narrative in this volume offers  valuable insights into real-life situations that most of us can relate to, and  memorable characters who remain with  you long after the story ends. Saniya’s writing, her idiom and  her sensibility are contemporary, her themes universal, and will resonate  powerfully with all readers of Indian fiction.