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

Published on Jun 17, 2024 06:31 PM IST

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)

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

On the road with Manou

For about a decade, the photographer has no fixed address. Here, he writes about travelling across the Northeast, documenting aspects of their cultural heritage

The Kanchenjunga (Manou)
Published on Jun 05, 2024 09:26 PM IST
ByManou

Review: Indian Literature’s issue on Trans Writing

The Sahitya Akademi’s journal’s issue devoted to trans writing includes excerpts from longer works, poetry, short fiction, essays and book reviews written in English and in major regional languages including Manipuri, Tamil, Kannada, Hindi, Bengali, Malyalam and Marathi

The Sahitya Akademi journal’s issue on writing by Indian transgender authors. (Courtesy Mohammad Farhan)
Updated on Jun 05, 2024 05:46 AM IST
ByMohammad Farhan

Review: The Book of Chai by Mira Manek

Including a range of fragrant recipes from the familiar Ukaro and Kadha to the outre Saffron Chai Muesli and Pumpkin Chai Latte, this is a celebration of the milky brew that’s an intrinsic part of the life of Indian communities worldwide

Chai stories (Shutterstock)
Updated on Jun 04, 2024 05:40 PM IST
BySudhirendar Sharma

Akshaya Bahibala, author, Bhang Journeys – “I believe in the power of stories”

Bookseller and co-founder of Bhubaneshwar’s The Walking BookFairs bookstore, Akshaya Bahibala’s debut book is a recounting of the years he spent intoxicated along with an assessment of the production and abuse of drugs in Orissa

Author and co-founder of The Walking BookFairs bookstore, Akshaya Bahibala (Courtesy the subject)
Published on Jun 03, 2024 08:36 PM IST

Book Box | Meet the history buff turned spy writer Ben Macintyre

Ben Macintyre on the psychology of spies and how to turn historical facts into riveting spy novels

Ben Macintyre (Sonya Dutta Choudhury)
Published on Jun 02, 2024 01:39 AM IST

HT Picks; New Reads

This week’s pick of interesting reads includes a food chronicle that entices readers to make everything from Gujarati kadhi to gulab ki kheer, a book about the first men and women who represented India on the world stage, and an exploration of how BR Ambedkar’s London years formed his thoughts on labour, women’s rights and political representation

On the reading list this week is a book of recipes from across India, a volume that presents the origin story of the Indian Foreign Service, and an exploration of how BR Ambedkar’s London years formed his thoughts on labour, women’s rights and political representation. (HT Team)
Published on May 31, 2024 10:47 PM IST
ByHT Team

Interview: Joshy Benedict, author, The Pig Flip

On creating his graphic novel about a gambling addict trying to change his behaviour, initially self publishing it in Malayalam, its subsequent journey, his visual influences and his spectacular depiction of landscapes

Author Joshy Benedict (Courtesy the publisher)
Published on May 31, 2024 10:47 PM IST
BySyed Saad Ahmed

Review: Bullets and Bylines by Shyam Bhatia

This extraordinary account of an extraordinary life is a must-read for those who want to know what it looks like to be deeply passionate about journalism

Afghan Mujahideen fought against the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan during the 1980s. The invasion started on December 25, 1979. This photograph was taken in Asmar in the Kunar Province of Afghanistan. (Pascal Manoukian/Sygma via Getty Images)
Published on May 31, 2024 10:45 PM IST
ByLamat R Hasan

Nathan Thrall – “Stories have the power to move even the most closed minds”

The winner of this year’s Pulitzer Prize for general non fiction for A Day in the Life of Abed Salama, his book on the West Bank under Israeli occupation, talks about exclusion and death in Palestine

Author Nathan Thrall (Courtesy www.nathanthrall.com)
Published on May 31, 2024 10:09 PM IST
ByMajid Maqbool

Review: Martyr! by Kaveh Akbar

A novel that chalks out the protagonist’s identity crisis to minutely observe Iranian-American angst and dissonance in ideas of nationhood

Dreams of Rumi (Raul C7/Shutterstock)
Updated on May 31, 2024 07:17 PM IST
ByRahul Singh

Essay: Respect my boundaries, dear peepal

The peepal provides refuge for humans and animals in the scorching summer and is considered a sacred tree in India. A meditation on this magnificent shade tree that can be both useful and destructive

“It all began when my gardener refused to pull out a peepal (ficus religiosa, or sacred fig) sapling growing out of a crevice in my boundary wall.” (Prerna Jain)
Published on May 31, 2024 05:33 PM IST

Review: What is Saved by Aamer Hussein

Fiction, memoir and biography sit side-by-side in this book that includes autofiction and pieces born of esoteric inspirations and historical sources that reveal the breadth of the author’s reading

A view of Karachi at night. (Ibrar Kunri/Shutterstock)
Updated on May 30, 2024 06:37 PM IST
ByAreeb Ahmad

Kailash Satyarthi - “We need to globalise compassion”

On the prevalence of slavery, how domestic child labour continues to flourish in India, what rescued children have taught him, and the steps the country needs to take regarding child rights

Nobel laureate Kailash Satyarthi (KSCF)
Published on May 29, 2024 09:04 PM IST
ByChittajit Mitra
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