Saturday, 20 June 2026

Lucknow: After the Lamps Go Out-Parveen Talha

Book: Lucknow: After the Lamps Go Out
Author: Parveen Talha
Publisher: Rupa Publications

I was provided a media copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.

Have you heard the stories of ghosts and jinns of Lucknow?

When the lamps go out, Lucknow becomes another city. In Lucknow, after the Lamps Go Out: Tales of Ghosts and Jinns, Parveen Talha gathers stories that move through the old quarters, ruined buildings, graveyards, railway platforms and forgotten houses of the City of Nawabs—stories of spirits, apparitions, unexplained visitations and jinns whose presence lingers just beyond the visible world. These are not conventional horror stories. They are tales steeped in Lucknow’s history, tehzeeb, memory and loss. The city’s past—especially the violence, grief and dislocation surrounding 1857— presses constantly against the present, giving rise to legends attached to places such as the Residency, Begum Kothi, La Martiniere, Firangi Mahal, Aminabad and Malhaur station. Moving between folklore, faith and lived recollection, the book evokes a Lucknow where the dead are not always gone, where jinns may intervene in human lives, and where memory survives in eerie, intimate forms.

Parveen explores the stories of Ghosts and Jinns in Lucknow through these 15 stories that span across the city-from La Martiniere to the Residency, and tell us how a different city lives within the boundaries once night arrives. What stands out in the book is that each of the stories is unique and while the theme remains common, the concept and idea is not the same, each story has its own essence that shows that not all apparitions are necessarily malevolent. The story titled “The Good Old Doctor” was one such story which I loved reading. Similarly, “Who Did the Surgery on Her” was another story that shows that all the stories about ghosts and jinns need not have unfavourable consequences. “Where Did the Delicacies Come From” and “Coronavirus and the Funeral” were stories that show that if your intentions are pure, then the jinns do help a person in the time of need.

The overall experience of reading the book is good and the stories are written with a good pace which prevents the reader from getting bored. The writing is engaging and keeps you turning the pages and move forward with the book. The sourcing of the stories is commendable, and I loved that it is not just the commonly known places, but places such as Malhaur that the author has covered in her book. Having lived in the city for quite some time and heard a few stories myself, this was a read that took me back to the lanes and the roads of Lucknow once again.

Overall, this is a book that is recommended to anyone looking to read about some of the hauntings of Lucknow. The book scores a 4.25/5 for me.  

Grab a copy of the book from a bookstore near you or on Amazon India.

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