This feature explores how Indian YA literature walks a fine line between bestselling romances and issues of societal relevance.
This feature explores how Indian YA literature walks a fine line between bestselling romances and issues of societal relevance.
Albert Camus’ The Plague shows us the alarming parallels between fiction and the reality of our current lockdown. Find out how.
Lubaina talks about how the immersive world of wordless picture books draws in children while giving them the chance to exercise critical thinking skills.
Vishes Kothari recounts how renowned author Bijji realised the importance and power of Rajasthani oral traditions and chose to document them for posterity.
In this feature, Deya examines the rise of food memoirs and how they became written reminders of cuisines, places and experiences that are special.
In this feature, Amita examines how our current reality is eerily reminiscent of the dystopian world represented in Orwell’s ‘1984’
This Small Press Month, we celebrate the rise of independent publishing houses in India, and their extraordinary contribution to Indian literature.
In this feature, Elsa explores how Krishna Sobti’s unique female characters managed to push readers to think beyond what was acceptable in society.
In this feature, Deya explores why there is a need for greater representation in literature of the unheard narratives of marginalised womxn.
In the face of religious riots and hate propaganda in India, Deepa Anappara’s ‘Djinn Patrol On The Purple Line’ holds up a mirror to our reality.
In this feature, Shweta explores how Isabel Allende’s ‘A Long Petal Of The Sea’ captures the pain of leaving home and sacrificing everything to survive.
This feature examines how home means different things to different people in ‘His Father’s Disease: Stories’ by Aruni Kashyap.
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