Comfortably Numb

Sheila Kumar's Storehouse

Book review: The Laughter by Sonora Jha

That savage chortle Sonora Jha`s book has a definitive personality; it is  someone standing in the shadows of an ancient arch looking out at a decidedly un-ancient campus square with a sardonic half-smile on their lips and savage murder in their heart. On the surface of it, The Laughter is about Oliver Harding, an old-school…

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Book review: The Retreat by Zara Raheem

Healing after heartbreak  Zara Raheem`s The Retreat is a nice light read. The style is a chatty one, the topic takes up the difficulty in sustaining, managing a marriage of some years, in this case ten, the location is the West Coast of America, and the protagonist, a Muslim working professional woman. Nadia Abbasi is…

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Book review: The Golden Years by Ruskin Bond

A wonderful life  The dispassionate reviewer frequently marvels at how this veteran writer continues to hold sway over readers, churning out book after book like some kind of conveyer belt. That speculation usually lasts only till the aforementioned individual starts to read Ruskin  Bond`s latest book; in no time,  they  will have succumbed to the…

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Book review: Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus

LESSONS IN CHEMISTRY by Bonnie Garmus. Penguin Books. This delightful book is actually a fierce feminist manifesto masquerading as a heartwarming domestic life story. The basketful of prizes it has won – Best Debut Fiction of 2022, Goodreads Choice Best Debut Novel Award, NYT No 1 bestseller, Book of the Year for The Times, Sunday…

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Book review: Night Train by Martin Amis

NIGHT TRAIN by Martin Amis. Vintage UK Books. At first, the story seems a straight send-up of American police stories. The narrator here is a policewoman who goes by the name of Mike Hoolihan; quite apart from the masculine-sounding moniker, she has the voice and the general build of a man, so gets frequently mistaken…

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Column: Deadlines and a Couple of Cappuccinos, Please

Coffeeshop chronicles: How WFC works for some, not all Soon  after WFH became the ante-Covid and post-Covid norm, WFC — Working from Cafes — got  its moment in the sun. WFC always had its devotees who had been quietly slipping into the nearest café, there to set up their notebooks, laptops and smartphones, order a…

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Book review: The Woman Who Climbed Trees

The Woman Who Climbed Trees In this sprawling multi-generational saga of a family based in Nepal, it is Meena the child-bride who is clearly the protagonist. Smriti Ravindra deftly combines the personal with the political in her debut novel; the main concern of this book, however, is women, and the love, loss and pain they…

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Book review: The Dictionary of Lost Words by Pip Williams

THE DICTIONARY OF LOST WORDS by Pip Williams. This was my Book Club`s pick for the month, and it turned out to be a most interesting story, as well as yet another sweet father-daughter story, that of young Esme whose father worked at Oxford on the OED. From the time Esme was a young girl,…

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Book review: The Bellboy by Anees Salim

THE BELLBOY by Anees Salim. Penguin Hamish Hamilton Books. Anees Salim sets such a  measured pace in unspooling the life and times of Latif the teenager, who is the bellboy of the book`s title, that the reader may well wonder where the author is going with this. That would be the regular reader; those familiar…

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Book review: The Blue Women by Anukrti Upadhyay

Compartmentalised lives  Anukrti Upadhyay is back with a fresh cache of short stories that effectively proves her earlier acclaimed work Kintsugi was no flash in the pan. There are a dozen short stories in this volume, all of them imbued with the characteristic quietude we have come to associate with this writer. When things —…

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