Step 1: Context of Partition literature
The Partition of India in 1947 inspired a wide range of novels that depict themes of displacement, trauma, violence, and memory. Works by writers such as Khushwant Singh (Train to Pakistan), Bapsi Sidhwa (Ice-Candy Man), and others form part of this tradition.
Step 2: Evaluate options
(A) What the Body Remembers — Shauna Singh Baldwin's novel focuses directly on the Partition, especially Sikh and Hindu women's experiences during displacement. ✔
(B) The Shadow Lines — Amitav Ghosh's novel deals with memory, trauma, and borders, including Partition and communal riots. ✔
(C) Cry, the Peacock — Anita Desai's novel, but it is about psychological breakdown and marital discord, not Partition. ✘
(D) Nectar in a Sieve — Kamala Markandaya's work about rural poverty, resilience, and colonial/postcolonial struggles, not Partition. ✘
\[
\boxed{\text{Novels about Partition trauma: (A) and (B)}}
\]
| a | Phileas Fogg and Jean Passepartout | i | William Shakespeare |
| b | Don Quixote and Sancho Panza | ii | Jules Verne |
| c | Candide and Pangloss | iii | Miguel de Cervantes |
| d | Dogberry and Verges | iv | Voltaire |