Anees Salim's List Of Favourites

Anees Salim is an author and advertising professional. His published works include, among others, Vanity Bagh, The Blind Lady’s Descendants and The Small-Town Sea. He is currently working on his sixth novel.

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Anees Salim is an author and advertising professional. His published works include, among others, Vanity Bagh, The Blind Lady’s Descendants and The Small-Town Sea. He is currently working on his sixth novel.

A House for Mr Biswas (V. S. Naipaul, Picador, Rs 450) 

Set in Trinidad and Tobago, this book tells the story of an ordinary Indian man struggling to build a house of his own. It remains my all-time favourite, thanks to its comic power and its unfailing ability to leave me overwhelmed.

Chronicle of a Death Foretold (Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Penguin India, Rs 199) 

Reconstructed in a pseudo-journalistic style, the book explores the circumstances leading to the murder of the fictional Santiago Nassar by two brothers. I rate it above some of the more celebrated books by the master storyteller.  

The Mimic Men (V. S. Naipaul, Picador, Rs 399) 

More than two decades have passed since I read this brilliant book about an Indo–Caribbean politician living in exile in a London boarding house. But I still remember the first snow of Ralph Singh, the protagonist, as if I finished reading it only a while ago.      

One Hundred Years of Solitude (Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Penguin India, Rs 399) 

Spanning over seven generations of a family, this magnum opus makes me feel that the best book in the world has been written and no one should even attempt to write a better one.

The Sound and the Fury (William Faulkner, Vintage, Rs 499)

This was the first book by Faulkner that I read. I consider it as his best because of its various narrative styles and the depth of its characters. It may not be an easy book to read, but it definitely is one that will touch you deeply.

Keep the Aspidistra Flying (George Orwell, Penguin Classics, Rs 399) 

Animal Farm and 1984 are indeed Orwell’s more recognized and discussed books. But, for some reason, this one...

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