From the NYT “Where is Ajay? What was the point of having raised him?” an elderly woman grumbles to her...
Reviews
Reviews
In Jesse Ball’s absorbing, finely wrought fourth novel, “Silence Once Begun,” a journalist also named Jesse Ball tells the story...
The prose is a triumph but the story, set in Sri Lanka during the civil war, plays too safe to...
Sankarshan Thakur’s biography of Nitish Kumar is also an intimate portrait of Bihar, a state you may be forced out...
Kamila Shamsie’s new novel animates history with textures of fruit, blood and stone: Open British-Pakistani writer Kamila Shamsie is worried...
Review of “Fukushima: The Story of a Nuclear Disaster” by David Lochbaum, Edwin Lyman, Susan Q. Stranahan and the Union...
Simon Denyer takes a hard look at India’s soft underbelly. Pradyot Lal feels it has merit: Tehelka Apart from writing of the...
Rana Dasgupta has produced a vivid and haunting account of the 'new India': The Guardian Paris, Vienna, New York: every...
Mala Pandurang reviews A Crowd of Twisted Things by Dawn Farnham (Monsoon books: Singapore . 2013, 326 pages. USD $ 15.95) A Crowd...
Paul Theroux, in his disturbing recent Africa-based novel,The Lower River, portrayed gangs of feral children, American aid workers insulated from...
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