Superficial but fun, this satire describes life for Chinese old money and nouveaux: The Independent At the heart of the...
Reviews
Reviews
Tales of Indian gods told with European art-inspired illustrations erase the Indian feel from this otherwise beautiful and magnificent production,...
Ed Tims reviews Japan 1941: Countdown to Infamy in Dallas News The government wanted to get out of a war that...
In his book (1971) about the creation of Bangladesh, Srinath Raghavan ties the world to the crisis. On his part...
Subhankar Banerjee reviews Slow Violence and the Environmentalism of the Poor by Rob Nixon in the LARB Equipped with a homeopathic vial...
Chris Randle reviews the book in the LARB In 2000, I was 12 years old, playing the brand-new Sega game Jet...
Susan Cunningham reviews Sudha Shah's book on Burma's last royals: LARB Myanmar's last royal family, summarily ousted by British colonizers...
An extraordinarily rich and moving novel about a young man's journey through South Korea with his dog: The Guardian A...
Nina Martyris reviews The Blind Man’s Garden by Nadeem Aslam in the LARB Aslam roots The Blind Man’s Garden in a fictional town in northern...
Fatima Bhutto’s debut novel, The Shadow of the Crescent Moon, is populated by unforgettable characters: The Hindustan Times Strong women characters,...
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