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Sheila Kumar's Storehouse

Book review: Things To Leave Behind by Namita Gokhale

This is more a brief take than review. Things to leave behind by Namita Gokhale.  Penguin Viking This is the third and final volume of Gokhale`s  Himalayan trilogy,  A Himalayan Love Story and Book of Shadows being the first two. However, I write of this as a standalone story, which it is. After I turned…

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Book review: Norse Mythology by Neil Gaiman

    Tales from the North  A master storyteller dons his storied cape again. I must confess that this would be my third reading of the Norse tales, stories that hold me in complete thrall each book, each reading. So my first reaction here was: Neil Gaiman doing a re-telling? Will it serve? However, Gaiman…

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Book excerpts: A Feast of Vultures by Josy Joseph

  A sobering, significant parsing of our system, political, economic, social.             

Book review: Moonglow by Michael Chabon

    Memory chaser   Price 12.99 Pounds Sterling. Michael Chabon’s  Moonglow  is a feel-good story with darkness at its heart.  Chabon, a novelist who has frequently moved between themes and genres, presents this as a family memoir. Then again, given the many literary flourishes contained within, the reader could be forgiven for thinking this…

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Book review: The Golden Legend by Nadeem Aslam

The master story-teller is back, weaving the usual magic with his words, writing a familiar yet brand-new tale of love in the times of bigotry and xenophobia.“ I wake up every day approaching life’s problems through fiction,“ says Nadeem Aslam.  Which explains the prose that soars even as it touches upon, examines, parses all the conflict life…

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Book review: Nutshell by Ian McEwan

This is more a brief take than review. So, this is about pretty Trudy who is cuckolding her  failed  poet husband John with his brother Claude, a property developer. John is getting rather inconvenient, even intractable,  and so they decide to do away with him. Yes, poison. What they don`t know is they have a witness-…

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Book review: Himalaya, an Anthology edited by Ruskin Bond and Namita Gokhale

This is more a brief take than review. In high places Every book I read which fixes its focus on the Himalaya mountain range, as well as the world`s highest peak Everest, further feeds my fascination with the mountains, with that mountain. This book is a varied collection of mountain tales from some highly  acclaimed…

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Book review: Ghachar Ghochar by Vivek Shanbagh; translation by Srinath Perur

This is more a brief take than review. The ties that bind…hard Ghachar Ghochar by Vivek Shanbhag. Translated by Srinath Perur. Harper Perennial Books. This little gem of a story deals in domestic doings, and the teller of the tale is an unnamed male at the centre of everything that is happening to his family….

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Book review: Always A Parent by Gouri Dange

Roadmap for rapport  A guide to traverse a tricky relationship road.  It`s a fact of life. Children grow up, marry, beget children themselves. Parents stay parents, just growing older. They continue to view their offspring as appendages to be forever kept under wing, protected, fussed over, guided, led. The (grown) children see this as intrusions,…

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Book review: The Chemist by Stephenie Meyer

 Spy on the run The Twilight author pens a spy thriller with mixed results.   I have to start with a confession – I have enjoyed Stephanie Meyer’s other books; the Twilight series,  as well as The Host. Yes, they were flawed and definitely cannot be considered as literary fiction but I was kept engaged by…

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