By Mohit Sinha: Connelly's The Reversal has just arrived. As far as I could gather from the reviews, the book brings Mickey Haller, the hot shot lawyer from The Lincoln Lawyer, which was the author first foray into legal thrillers and it came close to
Review by Geetika Vasudeva: I laugh, I cry, I express, I hide, I love, I hate, I care, I bear, I make, I break. I, Woman. A lot is explored, a lot is left. But nobody does it like Manju Kapur. In her first book,
By Sharanya Sridhar: Atlas Shrugged, the book that was voted among top 2 (the other book being Fountainhead by the same author) favorites of millions of Americans, stands as one of the books that changed my life. Created by Ayn Rand, Atlas Shrugged portrays the
By Shivani Bhatnagar: Have you ever wondered if there was an amazing way to deal with change in your work and in your life? If yes, then, “Who Moved My Cheese?” by Dr Spencer Johnson is exactly what you need. What attracted me to read
By Shubh Bansal: A magnificent plot; an essence of thrill and with uncertainty of what-would-happen-next, it leaves you baffled at every single page. You get so involved in it that you can’t stop reading till the last page in just one go. It includes several
By Utkarsh Chaturvedi: Many books have been published since the American occupation of Afghanistan but none of them has captured the essence of what makes Afghans so distinctive people. Published in 2003, the novel tells the story of a young Afghan boy and the world
Trishla Gupta: This book is a kind of a memoir recording the response of a single, gentle, merry and learned mind to the presence of an ancient city. William Dalrymple peels back the layers of Delhi’s history, in a travelogue that goes back in time,
Aarti Agarwal: Glancing the cover and having flipped through a few pages, it appeared to me one of those children’s books talking about animals, farms, their fights etc. But as I entered deep and deeper into it, I realized that it was not just a
Soumya Venugopal: Though the black title on the white cover looks appalling for my feminine sensibilities, a little note in the corner which read Winner of the Man Booker Prize 2008’ caught my attention. Not that it did not allure me these two years, but