Comfortably Numb

Sheila Kumar's Storehouse

Feature: The flamenco disapora

The gypsy`s India connect The Roma gypsies, who have a strong India connect, are largely reviled even as their music and dance is revered I’m sitting inside a small cave high up in a barrio (district) in the Sacromonte hills of Granada in Spain, which has willy-nilly been home to marginalised groups like the Romani…

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Book review: The Last days of Earth by Deepa Anappara

To map a sacred land The ethics of map-making and the invisibilisation of those who helped the British Empire in doing so, is at the heart of Deepa Anappara’s second book of fiction. Coming many years after Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line, her first,  well- received one, this book too, is meticulously researched and…

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Book review: The Jasmine Murders by Roopa Unnikrishnan

Blood in the boondocks   In her debut work, Roopa Unnikrishnan crafts an interesting murder mystery, positions it in the early Sixties, sets it in a deceptively ordinary TN small town. Of course, what we see is not what we get, and the place is a cauldron teeming with age-old taboos, seething communal tensions, secrets…

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Book review: Travels in the Other Place by Pallavi Aiyar

There`s travel and then there`s travel….  Pallavi Aiyar`s book has no ambiguity about the subject at hand. A neat meld of memoir and  travelogue, she takes us aboard her personal train, opens the compartment doors to us, tells us of trips into the land of Books, into the barren wastes of Illness, shows us how…

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Book review: The Land in Winter by Andrew Miller

When winter comes The phrase `the land in winter` is the house words for House Stark in George RR Martin’s A Game of Thrones fantasy novels, serving as a warning of the long cold months  and hard,  dangerous times ahead. Andrew Miller has used these words aptly as the title of his Booker- shortlisted The…

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Book review: Intemperance by Sonora Jha

The quest for love With a quirky central premise, this book draws you in straight away. A middle-aged Indian academic based in Seattle decides to hold a swayamvar to find a groom. The author follows up her previous critically acclaimed award- winning book ‘The Laughter,’ with this witty, perceptive, sparkling story. The book is narrated…

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Book review: The Eleventh Hour by Salman Rushdie

Intimations of mortality After an artful meld of history, imagination and some brilliant writing in `Victory City,` after a show of cold anger in `Knife,` Rushdie is the Elder Statesman or rather, the Elderly Litterateur here. This quintet of stories is quite self-indulgent, with many of the characters being vehicles through which the writer expresses…

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Book review: Heartbreak Unfiltered by Milan Vohra

The heartbreak manifesto It is ironical that the latest book by India’s first Mills & Boon author, Milan Vohra, is about love… followed by loss and heartbreak. A sign of the times perhaps, when sweeping right on one of the many dating apps does not necessarily lead to happily- ever- after; when we are more…

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Book review: Called by the Hills by Anuradha Roy

Over hill and dale First, it`s a memoir that takes us on a leisurely wander through the forests and dirt tracks of Ranikhet, where the author has lived for a quarter of a century now. Second, it has the most luscious illustrations ever, all done by the author,  giving us a clear picture of just…

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Book review: The Third Pole by Mark Synnott

THE THIRD POLE is Mark Synnott`s engrossing account of going up Mount Everest in search of the remains of the second of the fabled explorers of 1924, George Mallory and Sandy Irvine. For those who don`t know, the duo had attempted to summit Everest via the northern side in Tibet, had been last seen 800…

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