
The Last Hun by Ashwin Razdan
The legend of Attila the Hun is a widespread one, the tales of his valour and fierce nature having served as fodder for many a

The legend of Attila the Hun is a widespread one, the tales of his valour and fierce nature having served as fodder for many a

I began reading this novel sceptically, I admit. It seemed to be just another retelling of Jhansi Ki Rani, the warrior queen who splintered the

Bombay Penned And Painted On An Epic Canvas Twenty years ago, I discovered, in my knee-high boyhood, that Bombay, as we had always known it

I grew up in Maharashtra. Throughout school, our Indian history syllabus was restricted to the North and the West. The South was represented by such

When the back blurb of a book compares the New World of 1545 to the Yucatan Peninsula today, when there is magic and historical fiction

“To everything, turn, turn, turn,There is a season, turn, turn, turn,And a time to every purpose under heaven.” This song by The Byrds, which I’ve

[First written by Rupal Vyas, updated and expanded upon by Prakruti Maniar] Stories are not just child’s play; they give us our voice, our place

Jainand Gurjar reviews A Game of Fire by Nanak Singh, translated from Punjabi by Navdeep Suri (published by HarperCollins India, 2024). A Game of Fire

The chasm between the rich and diverse “regional” literature and the mainstream English literature has always been large. Still, the rise in the number of

There comes a time in a reader’s life when nothing on the bookshelf inspires her enough to be picked up. Back in the summer of
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