The Suspicions of Mr. Whicher
It may not be a total exaggeration to claim that the British have cornered the fictional murder mystery market. Some of the most popular British television imports are long running detective series like Midsomer Murders, Father Brown, and countless adaptation of Agatha Christie novels. Even the most popular fictional detectives that live in our ...
Traveling Japan In Haikus With Matsuo Basho
Read Matsuo Basho Create your own poetry. On this day of Spring! It’s April 17th, when we celebrate International Haiku Day worldwide because this form of ancient Japanese poetry is that awesome. If you are nerdy about poetry, then I expect your social feeds to be full of haiku memes, forwards, ...
My Top Reads For The Quarter
We are three months into 2021 and it’s time to take stock of things in life. COVID-19 is still here, Europe is going back into sporadic lockdowns and we are still asking–WHEN WILL THIS END? But it’s not all gloom and doom. On the personal front, with a new job ...
My Top Ten Reads of 2020
End of the year is a time for cheer and celebrations; it’s also time to catalog another year of our life. What you achieved (staying alive and not catching COVID), places you travelled to (nowhere, because COVID), things you ate (loads of home-cooked meals, because COVID) and books read (loads, ...
Keeping The Joy In Writing
I have been writing all my life. Stories, poems, and essays. Scribbles in diaries, haiku games with friends and long, winded letters to loved ones. Every single time emotions overwhelmed the mind, my instinctive reaction was to pick up a pen and paper and just write. Falling in love, falling ...
Never A Dull Moment In ‘Witness For The Prosecution’
The pandemic has forced us all indoors, and the best way to avoid the piling house work is to curl up in front of the television. We are surely spoilt for content, and sometimes it is hard to pick up what to watch from the new releases every week. Sometimes ...
‘The Lost Queen’ by Signe Pike
In The Lost Queen, Signe Pike dives deep in Welsh and Scottish myth to bring a fresh look at the legend of Arthur & Merlin. Pike takes us back to 550 A.D to Goddeu, a small kingdom in Scotland, where Languoreth, a ten-year-old princess and her twin brother, Lailoken, are ...
‘A Burning’ by Megha Majumdar
Megha Majumdar’s debut novel A Burning is literally setting the world ablaze with its rave reviews. The praise is so universal that I hesitated a bit before opening its pages. What if it did not live up to the hype, or worse, what if it mishandled the geopolitics that dominate today’s India? ...
‘The Dutch House’ by Ann Patchett
The latest novel by Ann Patchett is an intimate character study of a brother and sister, abandoned by their parents and their fate often tested by life. One day the Conroy siblings find themselves motherless, as Elena Conroy leaves them for a higher calling without ever bothering to say goodbye ...
The House on the Strand
Rebecca is Daphne Du Maurier’s most remembered and revered legacy. Melancholy yet haunting, forever immortalized in Hitchcock’s famous adaptation. The House on the Strand is not even close to her other famous works and is one of her later novels. If you ever want to read anything by Maurier, then ...
‘Kingdom’ Is Zombie Drama At It’s Finest
I wouldn’t usually put the words gorgeous and zombie in a sentence together, but that is what Kingdom is. A gorgeous zombie horror drama that also doubles up as a political-period thriller. So much in just one show. What It's About? Kingdom is set in the Joseon era, a few ...
‘The Underground Railroad’ by Colson Whitehead
The Underground Railroad is not the kind of book you want to read when you are sheltering-at-home, avoiding the rest of the human race and a pandemic. But then again, is there ever a right time to read about the horrors of slavery? As a 21st century immigrant American, I feel ...