Comfortably Numb

Sheila Kumar's Storehouse

Book review: The Golden Road by William Dalrymple

THE GOLDEN ROAD by William Dalrymple, Bloomsbury Publishers. If I call this a real feelgood book and you ask why, I shall offer you the subtitle: How ancient India transformed the world, it says. And before you raise that skeptical eyebrow, let me remind you that this author could write the manual for the innards…

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Book review: The Extraordinary Life of Max Bulandi By Sidharth Singh

Rock and rollercoaster This book will hold instant appeal for those who grew up listening to Elvis, The Beatles, Santana, then graduated to The Doors,  Pink Floyd,  Led Zeppelin. Who did drugs like tomorrow would never come. Who read JS…except, in this book it`s not the iconic Junior Statesman but a popular magazine called the…

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Book review: The Many Lives of Syeda X by Neha Dixit

Living under the radar Veteran journalist, prize-winning `shoe-leather` writer of many articles which have caught the startled attention of the authorities and the public alike, Neha Dixit`s first book is everything one would expect from her: an excellent piece of reportage. There is no soft immersion involved here. We are almost immediately introduced to the…

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Book review: There are Rivers in the Sky by Elif Shafak

One drop of water to bind them all  One single drop of water. It falls from the sky onto Ashurbanipal, the Assyrian  king. From then on, it alters its structure but not its DNA,  and enters the system of the other main characters: King Arthur of the Sewers and Slums, that self-taught genius who grows…

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Book review: A Wonderland of Words by Shashi Tharoor

The tagline reads: Around the world in 101 essays. These essays are an `expanded and augmented` version of Shashi Tharoor`s  `World of Words` column in the Khaleej Times wherein he parses the meaning of many an English  word, a term, a concept, indeed of a fast evolving language itself. Stray thought: this is just the…

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Book review: In Cold Blood by Truman Capote

IN COLD BLOOD by Truman Capote. Penguin Modern Classics. My Book Club`s choice for the month had me re-read `In Cold Blood,` this tour de force account of a gruesome set of murders committed in 1959, in Holcomb, agrarian Kansas. The facts, for those who wouldn`t know, are as follows. Two drifters,  Smith and Hancock,…

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Book review: Do Not Ask The River Her Name

Far away in Jerusalem…. Sheela Tomy, in her second book, the evocatively named Do Not Ask The River Her Name,  has moved from the hilly tracts of Kerala all the way over to Israel but the story keeps its roots firmly planted in the land of coconuts. The book`s protagonist is Ruth from Kollam, who…

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Book review: Hurda by Atharva Pandit

Murders most foul Ever so often there is distressing news of girls found dead in small-town India. It follows a set pattern. The reports almost always say that the cause of death is yet to be established; it could be due to suicide, murder or an accident. Places that the urban dweller pays scant attention…

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Book review: Like Being Alive Twice by Dharini Bhaskar

Love in dark times This inter-religious love story set in a dystopian unnamed nation packs quite a punch. It is an intense exploration of what it means to love in a fractured world. Priyamvada (Poppy) and Tariq are in love. When we meet them, Tariq intends to propose, and Poppy intends to say yes. In…

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Book review: Mother India by Prayaag Akbar

In the name of the mother Prayaag Akbar`s second book contains as much thought-provoking matter as his first,  Leila, did. Using a crisp, matter-of-fact style, Akbar draws a succinct portrait of Indian society caught in the glare of social media headlights. If life was a struggle to stay afloat for much of the earlier generations,…

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