A glimpse into Bangalore's soul and Dara Singh's biography, a chatty retelling of the story of a farmer’s son who goes on to tame international wrestlers
Chetan Bhagat's runaway blockbuster and another quiet yet surprising exit in the publishing world
Ihimaera's Indian epiphanies, a fictionalised account of JNU life and the best from The Modern Review in book form
Anita Nair takes to crime fiction and what James Joyce told the man painting his portrait
A professor of Physics writes about the troubled Af-Pak region, Anuja Chauhan's latest and Truman Capote's unfinished book turns a thirty.
Upamanyu Chatterjee becomes a full-time writer at long last, the Snowden-Roy-Cusack conversation in book form and why A. Raja's book plans are shelved for now
A book on former RBI governor, why Trump may become POTUS and the stuff Potterheads are waiting for
Vinay Sitapati’s biography of P.V. Narasimha Rao and rumours about the next big book on political intrigue
C.P. Surendran’s fourth novel, the new sensation in poetry and celebrating Irish writer Flann O’Brien
Two Indian-origin doctor-authors in the NYT bestsellers' list and another bags the Dubin Lit Award
On how newspaapers are showing that journalism is the first draft of history, a book on medical malpractices and Achala Moulik's latest
The launch of Rana Ayyub's controversial book on Gujarat riots, what Lewis Carroll's fans are looking out for and colouring books for adults.
Trouble at the JLF Southbank London, more changes at HarperCollins and why there was no CALM this year
Functions at the President's estate, Veteran editor H.K. Dua starts writing about his eventful journalistic career and Anton Chekhov on the novel
Michael D’Antonio’s attempt to deconstruct Trump, rediscovering Walt Whitman and the priceless gift Arundhati Roy gave to N. Ram
Two books about two of India’s biggest TV networks, Shiv Shankar Menon's book on China and Graham Greene on Cuba
Katju's ammo filled autobiography, Shakespeare's 400th birthday and the Kejriwal-Modi fight that is set to hit bookstores
He would take his colour, brushes and canvas outside to paint and talk with his love. He would stand close to the window and paint, keeping an eye on his muse.
They say the violin mimics the human sound. In his case, it was that of love, of longing. He didn’t know any other way of loving.
Younger people do not have much progressive beliefs; a 2017 survey found that one-third of young people opposed inter-caste marriage.