b

Book review of Warlight: The Kindness of Strangers




b

Book review of The Idol Thief: Spirited Away






b

The Lies That Bind book review: The Crisis of Identity




b

Easier Said than Done book review: Love of the Game




b

The Revolutionary Ride book review: The Price of Happiness





b

In Mahesh Rao’s second novel, exploring the moral challenge that money and social mobility pose




b

To Hell and Back




b

The Table is Set








b

Between wickets: Mike Brearley’s latest book traverses 50 years of the sport




b

Bhupen Hazarika: Everything I Never Told You




b

‘It would be naïve to think that one day nuance would happen on Twitter’





b

Forgetting partition, remembering partition




b

Book review: The cities he loved and lost




b

Book review: Not quite at home




b

Book review: History, process and pious hope




b

Not another brick in the wall





b

The Barefoot Coach book review: Your friendly neighbourhood sportsman




b

The Bhagavata Purana book review: Of times and tales past





b

The remarkable, unassuming life and literary legacy of AK Ramanujan




b

The life and times of the Hungry Generation of modern Bengali poets, arguably the most dynamic and divisive literary movement of its generation




b

What Can’t Be Said Is Written




b

A comprehensive account of the history of Sikkim since 1947, that lays to rest any suggestion of the forcible annexation of the state




b

Arundhathi Subramaniam’s new volume of poetry is unpredictable and utterly compelling




b

KS Komireddi’s book on brief history of India raises important questions even if it doesn’t address them






b

‘Bottle of Lies’ review: ‘Pharma Cos often make their worst drugs … for least regulated markets, including India’








b

Book review: Beloved child of Mother Bapu






b

Beginning a new conservation




b

Neil deGrasse Tyson on his new book, Letters from an Astrophysicist, a compilation of this correspondence




b

Wild Himalaya book review: In High Places




b

Book review: Bridgital Dreams




b

Pico Iyer offers an honest, anecdotal and arguably basic cultural kaleidoscope view of Japan




b

‘The elite’s grip over cultural production is gone,’ says author Amitabha Bagchi



  • Books and Literature