Trauma of Maoist insurgency in literature: Reading Palpasa Café, Forget Kathmandu and Chhapamar ko Chhoro - Khagendra Acharya Testifying to the past has been an urgent task for many fiction writers …. Trauma narratives – fictional narratives that help readers to access traumatic experience – have taken an important place among diverse artistic, scholarly, and testimonial representations in illuminating the personal and public aspects of trauma. (Vickory, 2002, p.1) Maoist insurgency in discourse Ten years of Maoist insurgency in Nepal, launched by Communist Party of Nepal-Maoist (CPN-M) from March 1996 to November 2006, has inflicted some horrendous cases of traumatic experience. In statistical terms, around 17,000 were killed, 1500 disappeared, 75,000 injured and 250,000 internally displaced. The reality not acknowledged by the numeral above sounds equally horrible: countless people were tortured, raped, abducted and physically brutalized. Clearly, the period has punctuated the memory of a large number of people and become the subject of fairly substantial body of writing. The writings reveal variety in both the subject matter and the perspectives: a number of accounts record views of combatants/ security forces; many other present reporting of media correspondents and a considerable number provide findings of researchers. In brief, the texts that ground on insurgency vary from analytical accounts to narrative representations.