Comfortably Numb

Sheila Kumar's Storehouse

Book review: Return to Sri Lanka by Razeen Sally

Razeen Sally`s  RETURN TO SRI LANKA was first published in India by Juggernaut Books; this edition is published by Simon and Schuster Books in 2025. Packed with information delivered in the most dispassionate manner as befits an academic, the book is such a good read. The product of a Welsh mother and a Lankan Muslim…

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Book review: Lifequake by Tarini Mohan

The long way back  She was young, all of twenty-three, standing on the threshold of a new life in Uganda, in a new job, having made new friends. Then, one evening, she gets onto a boda, a motorcycle taxi, along with a friend. The boda is violently rear-ended by a vehicle and the driver, the…

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Book review: The Many Lives of Syeda X

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: Age of Vice by Deepti Kapoor

The good, bad and the ugly Deepti Kapoor blew readers away with her 2014 debut novel, A Bad Character. Nine years on, she`s back with Age of Vice and it would be no exaggeration whatsoever to say that this book too, is blowing readers away. Adopting an almost austere style in  telling the old- old…

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Book review: False Allies by Manu S. Pillai

FALSE ALLIES India`s Maharajahs in the Age of Ravi Varma by Manu Pillai  (Juggernaut Books). The book is something of an eye- opener for those whose opinion of Indian princes of the past  was less than favourable, who placed them all in one velvet-lined drawer of history, labelling them degenerates/despots/dissolute beings. So yes, some of…

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Book review: Jahangir by Parvati Sharma

Jahangir by Parvati Sharma. Juggernaut Books. The king known to history students and history buffs more for being indolent, over-fond of his drink, an emperor who  avoided military campaigns, a vicious, even capricious man,  becomes a very interesting figure in this book. Nuruddin Muhammad Jahangir. The fourth of the six Great Mughals. An inveterate chronicler…

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