"A Chughtai Quartet" comprises the novellas, spanning Chughtai's literary career from its early stages to the last years of her writing life -- "The Heart Breaks Free" ('Dil ki Duniya') written in 1918; "The Wild One" ('Ziddi') in 1939; "Obsession" ('Saudai') and "Wild Pigeons" ('Jungli Kabutar').
The novellas have been translated from Urdu by Tahira Naqvi, a lecturer in the Department of Middle Eastern and Islamic Studies at New York University.
At first, struggling against society's harsh mores, suffering its blows, these women appear to be hapless victims. However, even as they pass through fire they do not let it consume them. They achieve what we may not regard as "triumphs" in the usual sense, but which do translate into a victory of sorts; tragedy pursues them, but in the end they swim against the tide.
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The works in the collection, published by Women Unlimited, offer valuable insights into the ways Chughtai develops her characteristic themes revolving around the lives of women.
According to Naqvi, "The Heart Breaks Free", in which Chughtai draws on her childhood memories of life in Bahraich, is one of her best stories.
Together, the women of the household proceed to ruin the life of Bua, a free spirit who "had created a free world of her own where she ruled".