Udayan falls in with a group of radicals associated with the Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist)-a splinter group of the Communist Party of India with ties to the burgeoning Naxalite movement, a violent uprising originally started by poor sharecroppers in the West Bengal village of Naxalbari. As the boys enter their collegiate years and attend separate local universities, they begin to drift apart for the first time in their lives. The older, more reserved Subhash often finds himself roped into trouble by his younger, more impulsive brother Udayan. The boys are one year apart in age, and inseparable. Between the two ponds there is a lowland, which floods in the rainy season. Their neighborhood, Tollygunge, is full of refugees whose lives were displaced by the 1947 Partition of India, but the boys themselves live in a modest, middle-class home which sits on the edge of a stretch of land occupied by two ponds. Brothers Subhash and Udayan Mitra are growing up in Calcutta in the 1960s.
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