105 books
Even the most artistic of imaginings can sometimes seem callow inthe face of truth. That which appears may not be and that which lieshidden might just be the stark, naked face of reality. Where the Rainbow Ends is a racy page-turner that promises totake you on a tempestuous and soul-stirring journey which shallremain with you long after you have put the book down. Rahul had everything going his way-a soaring career, a happy family and all else a man his age could ...
In the middle of the catastrophic 2008 recession, Aditya, a jobless, penniless man meets an attractive stranger in a bar. Little does he know that his life will change forever.
When Radhika, a young, rich widow, marries off her stepdaughter, little does she know that the freedom she has yearned for is not exactly how she had envisioned it.
They say homing pigeons always come back to their mate, no matter where you leave them on the face of this earth. The Homing ...
Have you ever heard of any NRI who: Hasnt washed dishes and vacuumed carpets Hasnt missed any of his friends/ family members wedding in India Doesnt watch Indian movies, no matter how long he has been outside India Hasnt been to a striptease Doesnt indulge in Indian food whenever he visits India on a vacation Do you know any Indian who: Hasnt thought of moving out of India for a better, safer life Isnt fed up of the scams, traffic jams, filth, noise, crowd and ...
What would you do if destiny twisted the road you took? What if it threw you to a place you did not want to go? Would you fight, would you run or would you accept? Set across two cities in India in the early eighties, 'Life is what you make it' is a gripping account of a few significant years of Ankita's life.Ankita Sharma has the world at her feet. She is young, good-looking, smart and has tonnes of friends and boys swooning over her. College life is ...
The book is a journey through the age of confusion and exploration – the late teens, a path through growing up adventures and trysts that must be secret, even in the relative permissiveness of post Gen-Y India. It is a battle on many fronts and the one that cannot be lost is the battle with a debilitating nerve condition – a battle aided by medicine, doctors and good wishes; and yet has to be fought all alone. When the mists clear there is Rupali, the ...
I'm not Twenty Four...I've Been Nineteen for five years..." is story of Saumya whose name is so confusing that people think that she is a boy. After completing his MBA from MDI when she joins The Lala Steel, she never thought that her life will be going to change so drastically. How A Delhite girl survived in small town of karnatka? How She meet an Indian Hippie, Subhro and fall in love with him? How she reacted when she canme to know that ...
The story is set in a small university campus, where Virendra Chauhan--a research scientist--and his students are trying to set right a key instrument which has failed to function since its arrival. Although the faulty machine and the attempts to make it work form the core of the narrative, it expands into an allegory of the human spirit--its sorrows and joys, strife and peace, its unending quest--rooted in contemporary social reality. All the events in the story ...
In The River Has No Camera, we look at Kerala through the eyes of a young cosmopolitan Indian woman and what we see is a curious mix of alienation and belonging. The backdrop of the story is the glorious and turbulent past of the rich Nayar landlords. There is a certain irony in that the narrator's great-grandfather, supposedly the embodiment of a caste ridden and oppressive feudal system, embraces socialism. His volte-face has drastic and rather unpleasant ...
This book is a journey through a land where everything is sacred; where peaks are worshipped; where lakes are held in awe; where tree-cutting is considered a sin; where birds carry the wisdom of saints; where Hindu, Sikh and Buddhist seers share the same pantheon; where politicians reconcile themselves to dharma; where independence of the soul rather than the body is paramount; where people belong to antiquity and eternally wait for that ultimate journey that ...
It has got intrigue, mystery, humor and, of course, the emotional scenes. The book is about a disrupted air journey where the aircraft is forced to land at an unknown island called Takladweep owned by a wealthy but mysterious man. When twelve year old Nikhil is sent alone for the first time aboard Bharat Airlines, he is caught up amidst a circle of peculiar grown ups each with their unique habits... From the pleasant, refreshingly beautiful airhostess, to ...
Short, sharp and sassy, this collection of satirical sketches snaps a metaphorical finger in front of our eyes. It tells us to wake up and look around before it is too late and and it does so with no great vim and vigour. The hallmark of Asghar Wajahat's writing is its steadfast refusal to strike any loud notes. Each of these ten-part series carries a tiny picture of our everyday life, a cameo of our very "Indianness" and an unabashed look at the life ...