10 Gems From William Dalrymple's Book Collection

The much-beloved writer, well known for his travelogues, shares the top 10 books from his library.

offline
The much-beloved writer, well known for his travelogues, shares the top 10 books from his library.

A non-fiction writer, William Dalrymple is known for his travelogues—In Xanadu traces the path taken by Marco Polo, while City of Djinns documents his love affair with Delhi—and historical narratives, like White Mughals, which attacks the shaky theory of the 'clash of civilizations'. His recent work with Anita Anand, Kohinoor (Juggernaut), tells the intriguing tale of the infamous diamond.

In Patagonia (Bruce Chatwin, Penguin Classics, Rs 861)

"One of the most brilliantly written books of recent times, in wonderfully cool, precise, perfect prose", Chatwin's account of his adventures in Patagonia, in 1974, revolutionized travel writing. Divided into 97 untitled sections, they piece together to form a complete narrative.

The Fall of Constantinople 1453 (Sir Steven Runciman, Canto, Rs 3,165)

An account of the defeat of the Eastern Romans at the hands of the Ottomans, this is Dalrymple's "favourite history book and the model for The Last Mughal—brilliantly capturing a moment in time, and featuring major historical research in many languages."

Breakfast at Tiffany's (Truman Capote, Penguin Essentials, Rs 350)

Set in the 1940s, this is the story of socialite Holly Golightly and her glamorous life in New York City—Dalrymple describes it as "an almost  perfect novella, as glittering as its subject".

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil (John Berendt, Vintage Books, Rs 499)

Based on the murder of a male prostitute in the 1980s, Dalrymple says it is "half detective story and half travel book".

A Time of Gifts (Sir Patrick Leigh Fermor, NYRB Classics, Rs 800)

One of the "most beautifully written travel books of our times", this is a travelogue by the British author, a memoir of his journey from the Hook of Holland to Constantinople on foot in the 1930s.

<...
Read more!