Namita Gokhale's Favourite Books

The co-founder of the Jaipur and Bhutan literary festivals shares her list.

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The co-founder of the Jaipur and Bhutan literary festivals shares her list.

Author of several fiction and non-fiction books, publisher of many more as a founder--director of Yatra Books and co-founder of the Jaipur and Bhutan literary festivals, Namita Gokhale has donned multiple hats in a career spanning three decades. Her well-known works include Paro: Dreams of Passion and Mountain Echoes among others.

Abhijnanashakuntalam: The Recognition of  Shakuntala (Kalidasa, Penguin, Rs 499)

The most popular and well known of classical Sanskrit plays, this is a heart-rending and masterfully constructed narrative of forgetting and remembering. I have written a novel Shakuntala: The Play of Memory, which is a tribute to this great work.

The Tale of Genji (Murasaki Shikibu, Everyman's Library, Rs 2,420)

Considered the first novel ever, this marvellous work of Japanese literature was written in the 11th-century Heian era by the noblewoman Lady Murasaki. I have read and reread the classical translation by Edward G. Seidensticker several times.

War and Peace (Leo Tolstoy, Penguin Classics, Rs 550) 

The depth and range and craftsmanship of this massive novel is staggering. A philosophical chronicle of change and endurance, it is a truly universal work of art, with a unique place in world literature.

Crime and Punishment (Fyodor Dostoyevsky, Vintage Classics, Rs 499) 

I have been deeply influenced by the great Russian novelists, and Crime and Punishment, an intense psychodrama that takes the reader deep into the mind of the protagonist Rodion Raskolnikov, remains one of the most compelling novels I have ever read.

The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie (Muriel Spark, Penguin Modern Classics, Rs 350)

I love Muriel Spark's novels because they are whimsical and enigmatic, yet rooted in deep religious and mystic understanding. This is perhaps her best and most iconic novel.

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