The world today is witnessing a large change - a change that seeks bekhauf azaadi, a freedom that cripples all fear. In India, in the recent times, the question of a woman's being as she would wish, at home or outside, has been at the core of such a debate. Possibly this process needs to meander into all other collective beings precisely because we cannot still vouch for the fact that in any part of the world there is a promised land for women and for everyone who seeks respectful living.
'Her Letters' is an attempt to rediscover Mrinal, the protagonist of Tagore's 'Streer Patra' written hundred years ago. In a letter that she writes to her husband, Mrinal the poet declares herself free and finds herself merging with nature. She writes, - 'For I shall also live. Here, I live.' As she finds herself, her collaborators also find themselves in their own stories that get woven to 'Her Letters'.