Before winning a Nieman Fellowship at
Harvard University when she was 32, Bahadur was a staff writer for
The Philadelphia Inquirer and the
Austin American-Statesman. In her decade as a daily newspaper reporter, she covered politics, immigration and demographics in Texas, Pennsylvania and New Jersey and spent three months in the spring of 2005, during the Iraq war, as a foreign correspondent in Knight Ridder's Baghdad bureau. Since then, she has worked as an essayist, literary critic and freelance journalist, contributing to
The New York Times Book Review,
The New York Review of Books,
The Nation,
The New Republic,
Dissent and other publications. The book was a finalist for the 2014
Orwell Prize and the Center for Documentary Studies Writing Prize at
Duke University, and it won the New Jersey State Council on the Arts Award for Prose and Gordon K. and Sybil Lewis Prize.
The Chronicle of Higher Education included the book in its round-up of the best scholarly books of the decade in 2020. Bahadur collaborated with poet and translator Rajiv Mohabir to recover the only known text by an indentured immigrant in the Anglophone Caribbean, a songbook by Lal Bihari Sharma, first published as a pamphlet in India in 1915. Mohabir's English translation,
I Even Regret Night: Holi Songs of Demerara, was published in 2019 with an afterword by Bahadur, who first encountered the text in the
British Library while doing research for
Coolie Woman. Bahadur is an associate professor of English and journalism at
Rutgers University-Newark and has taught creative nonfiction at the
University of Basel in Switzerland and Caribbean literature at
City College of New York. ==Bibliography==