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Andaleeb Wajid – “I don’t want my characters to be unidimensional”

Published on Jun 25, 2024 06:27 PM IST

On her latest novel, The Henna Start-up being shortlisted for the Neev Book Award, writing romances, her books being adapted for OTT, and her upcoming memoir

Author Andaleeb Wajid (Courtesy the subject)

Is the New York Times bestseller list politically biased?

Our investigation suggests it is

The New York Times Headquarters(Getty Images)
Published on Jun 23, 2024 08:00 AM IST
The Economist

Book Box | Three unexpected ways to introduce yourself

Experimenting with tell-me-about-yourself questions reveals creative ways of connecting with people

Sonya Dutta Choudhury(Sonya Dutta Choudhury)
Published on Jun 23, 2024 12:37 AM IST

HT Picks; New Reads

On the reading list this week is book that looks at how a fringe movement changed how a generation thinks about money, a coming-of-age narrative set in a coal-mining town, and a thriller about the terror in finding out who your family really is

This week’s pick of interesting reads includes a book on how a fringe movement changed investing, a narrative about growing up in a coal-mining town in India, and a thriller about the return of a mother who disappears and is presumed dead. (HT Team)
Published on Jun 21, 2024 10:25 PM IST
ByHT Team

Interview: Vincent Brown, Author, Tacky’s Revolt

On an important slave revolt during the 18th century Atlantic slave trade actually being part of a larger war between emerging colonial powers, the interconnected world, and how warfare has consequences in distant locales

Author Vincent Brown (Jaipur Literature Festival)
Published on Jun 21, 2024 10:23 PM IST
BySimar Bhasin

Review: Brotherless Night by VV Ganeshananthan

Winner of the Women’s Prize for Fiction 2024, Brotherless Night is the story of a family caught between the violence of the state and of the militant Tamil Tigers during the Sri Lankan civil war

Civilians being displaced from parts of Kilinochchi and Mullaitivu districts after the Sri Lankan army’s military offensive in January 2009. (Courtesy Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation)
Published on Jun 21, 2024 10:23 PM IST
ByRutba Iqbal

Review: Rescuing a River Breeze by Mrinalini Harchandrai

A historical novel set in the days leading up to the liberation of Goa in 1961, Rescuing A River Breeze provides a snapshot of a vanished time while also examining the ideas of freedom and honesty

The Indian tricolour is unfurled in Goa on December 22, 1961, two days after the Portuguese surrender. (HT Archives)
Updated on Jun 21, 2024 10:23 PM IST
ByPercy Bharucha

Of temples, Tamil Nadu, and the interconnectedness of things

For the believer, a temple is the locus of mystique and might with the southern state’s ancient places of worship being particularly powerful. The author writes that, as she visited numerous temples there, she came to accept the Upanishadic insight that nothing ever happens by chance

The Airavatesvara Temple in Kumbakonam. (Srinivasan.Clicks/Shutterstock)
Published on Jun 21, 2024 03:41 PM IST
ByDevanshi Mody

Shōgun: Lost and found in translation

Unlike earlier television versions and James Clavell’s 1975 novel itself, Shōgun on FX emphasises the Japanese perspective even as it presents the tension between fate and free will, beauty and impermanence, duty and desire. All while lavishly recreating Sengoku-era Japan

A scene from Shogun (Courtesy FX)
Published on Jun 21, 2024 03:39 PM IST

Review: Loot by Tania James

Masterfully plotted, Loot, which plunges the reader into the heart of Tipu Sultan’s desperate last stand and then hurtles through the British conquest and beyond, is a novel dealing with revolutions and war, colonisation and cultural restitution, relationships, personal journeys and multicultural exchange

Portrait of Tipu Sultan by an anonymous Indian artist in Mysore, ca. 1790–1800. (Fowler&fowler/ Wikimedia Commons)
Published on Jun 20, 2024 04:45 PM IST
ByNikhil Kumar

Arundhathi Subramaniam – “I am aware now of how to turn rage into celebration”

The author of 11 books of poetry and prose talks about her latest work, Wild Women: Seekers, Protagonists and Goddesses in Sacred Indian Poetry and about winning the Mahakavi Kanhaiyalal Sethia Poetry Award

Poet Arundhathi Subramaniam (Penguin Random House India)
Published on Jun 19, 2024 07:01 PM IST

Must-reads for Pride Month

From the collection that shattered the idea that homosexuality is a 19th century Western invention to the Booker winning story of a boy growing up in Glasgow and the moving autobiography of a hijra, here’s a list of classic titles to read during this Pride Month

The Pride Parade in Bengaluru in 2017 (HT Photo)
Published on Jun 18, 2024 05:51 PM IST
BySharmistha Jha

KG Subramanyan at 100

Curated by Nancy Adajania, ‘One Hundred Years and Counting: Re-Scripting KG Subramanyan’ at Emami Art in Kolkata shows the master in a new light

Artist KG Subramanyan (1924-2016) (HT Photo)
Published on Jun 18, 2024 12:08 PM IST
ByShireen Quadri

Meet V.V (Sugi) Ganeshananthan, this year's Women's Prize for Fiction winner

Ganeshananthan, the writer of a novel set during the Sri Lankan civil war, talks about the term ‘terrorist’, feminist reading groups and the craft of writing

V.V (Sugi) Ganeshananthan and Brotherless Night(Women’s Prize)
Published on Jun 17, 2024 06:31 PM IST

Alex Michaelides: “Novels are about expansion”

The bestselling British-Cypriot author and screenwriter is best known for The Silent Patient, which sold a million copies worldwide. His new novel, The Fury, is set on a remote island in Greece much like the one where he grew up

Author Alex Michaelides (Wolf Marloh (USE))
Updated on Jun 15, 2024 09:02 AM IST

HT Picks; New Reads

On the reading list this week is a guide to five immensely popular eateries and their many offerings, a locked room murder mystery, and the first authoritative book on the Nagarwala scandal

This week’s pick of great reads includes a book on five famous eateries, a gripping locked room murder mystery, and a book on the Nagarwala scandal of the Indira Gandhi era. (HT Team)
Updated on Jun 15, 2024 09:00 AM IST
ByHT Team

Review: Ma is Scared by Anjali Kajal

While earlier Dalit literature brought out spine-chilling details of oppression, Anjali Kajal’s stories in Ma is Scared critique caste hegemony and reflect on the oppression of Dalits by highlighting finer strands of discrimination in places of education

The quiet humiliations of the classroom. Anjali Kajal’s stories highlight discrimination in places of education (representative picture only). (HT Photo)
Updated on Jun 15, 2024 08:52 AM IST
ByKinshuk Gupta

Review: Mumbai Murmurings; 213 Tiny Tales of Theatre by Ramu Ramanathan

A record of theatre personalities in Mumbai and Maharashtra through entries comprising brief life facts, illustrative anecdotes, and samples of work, Ramu Ramanathan’s Mumbai Murmurings surprises and delights at every turn

A play being performed at Prithvi Theatre, Mumbai. (Prasad Gori/Hindustan Times)
Updated on Jun 15, 2024 08:48 AM IST
ByMahmood Farooqui

Essay: A queer rite of passage

On cruising, Grindr, the gay gaze, a sudden explosion of violence and its unhappy aftermath that exposes the insensitivity of our law enforcement and health providers. A personal piece on confronting and overcoming very real fears #PrideMonthSpecial

People out in Lodhi Gardens in New Delhi. “While the cruising scenes before the era of dating apps like PlanetRomeo and Grindr have been documented, digital disruption has added another layer to cruising.” (Sanchit Khanna/Hindustan Times)
Updated on Jun 14, 2024 10:35 AM IST

Review: Ramblings of a Bandra Boy by Joy Bimal Roy

Divided into sections titled Travel, Family, People, Me, Jol-Khabar and Supernatural, this book, comprising a collection of the author’s Facebook posts, educates, entertains and informs

Remnants of old Bandra (Shutterstock)
Published on Jun 13, 2024 05:57 PM IST
ByShoma A Chatterji

Walking in the footsteps of Heidi and her creator, Johanna Spyri

An enduring classic of children’s literature, Heidi underscores the therapeutic power of nature, the beauty of the everyday, the value of simplicity, and the importance of hope. Revisiting the book and the landscape that’s such an intrinsic part of it on the author’s 197th birth anniversary

A village in the Swiss Alps much like the one Heidi lived in . (Shutterstock)
Published on Jun 12, 2024 07:59 PM IST
ByTeja Lele

Sourav Roy: “There are deep problems despite the ‘Gitanjali Shree Effect’”

On translating Hoshang Merchant’s The Man Who Would Be Queen into Bangla, grappling with finding precise sexual terms, the need for more queer writing in Indian languages, and the impossibility of making a living from translation #PrideMonthSpecial

Translator Sourav Roy (Courtesy the subject)
Published on Jun 11, 2024 09:09 PM IST
ByChittajit Mitra

Appupen - “I’m scared of AI just like everybody else”

On his new graphic novel Dream Machine on Artificial Intelligence and on teaming up with Perumal Murugan to recreate CS Chellappa’s classic jallikattu novella, Vaadivaasal

Graphic novelist Appupen (Courtesy the subject)
Published on Jun 10, 2024 09:21 PM IST

Book Box | The difficulty of raising children in virtual and real worlds

The Anxious Generation by Jonathon Haidt raises questions about the best ways to raise healthy and happy children in both the virtual and the real worlds.

The Anxious Generation(Sonya Dutta Choudhury)
Published on Jun 09, 2024 01:23 AM IST

Amor Towles – “Aspiration is a very strong aspect of American culture”

On avoiding drawing from his personal life while writing fiction, including the late novelist Paul Auster as a character in one of his short stories, and working with translators

Author Amor Towles (Courtesy the publisher)
Updated on Jun 08, 2024 02:46 PM IST

HT Picks; New Reads

On the reading list this week is a memoir of a fifty-year engagement with public action, a volume on the south Asian explorers who documented over one million square miles in central Asia and Tibet, and an account of VS Naipaul’s family and of cultural change in Trinidad by his sister

This week’s pick of interesting reads includes a memoir of a fifty-year engagement with public action, a book on the south Asian explorers who documenting large swathes of central Asia and Tibet, and the story of VS Naipaul’s family in Trinidad. (HT Team)
Published on Jun 07, 2024 09:50 PM IST
ByHT Team

Review: Fraternity; Constitutional Norm and Human Need by Rajmohan Gandhi

In a lucid volume on the rarely emphasised virtue of fraternity enshrined by the preamble of our constitution, Rajmohan Gandhi seems to suggest that, despite its recent exclusions, there is hope yet for our society to be more inclusive

“The volume is not a simple elucidation of fraternity but a questioning narrative that outlines the limits and scopes of this “brotherhood”, which was and can be a prime glue to weld our unity in diversity.” (Shutterstock)
Published on Jun 07, 2024 09:49 PM IST
ByMaaz Bin Bilal

Review: Before I Forget by MK Raina

An unvarnished social document that reveals the restorative power of art to rebuild connections and communities, the theatre director’s memoir presents his deep engagement with and commitment towards grassroots cultural movements

Dal Lake, Srinagar, Kashmir, in 1986. (Flickr Vision)
Updated on Jun 07, 2024 09:49 PM IST
ByKartik Chauhan

Watching The Mousetrap in the West End

Catching a show of Agatha Christie’s classic whodunit definitely tops the list of great things to do in London

The cast of The Mousetrap at the end of the show. (Mihir Chitre)
Published on Jun 07, 2024 08:49 PM IST
ByMihir Chitre

The Discarnates, All of Us Strangers and the pain of homecoming

Two ghost stories, two worlds and two temporalities inhabit the same representational space in Nobuhiko Obayashi’s The Discarnates and Andrew Haigh’s All of Us Strangers, both of which take off on Taichi Yamada’s novel, Stranger

The weight of memories (Shutterstock)
Published on Jun 06, 2024 08:21 PM IST
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