Top Picks From Ira Mukhoty's BookShelf

In books such as Daughters of the Sun and Heroines, Ira Mukhoty made apparent her love for feminist narratives in Indian history and mythology. Released in 2021, her first novel Song of Draupadi helps further that abiding affection for strong, radical women. Her latest work is The Lion and The Lily: The Rise and Fall of Awadh (2024)

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In books such as Daughters of the Sun and Heroines, Ira Mukhoty made apparent her love for feminist narratives in Indian history and mythology. Released in 2021, her first novel Song of Draupadi helps further that abiding affection for strong, radical women. Her latest work is The Lion and The Lily: The Rise and Fall of Awadh (2024)

Beloved by Toni Morrison, RHUK

Having been brought up on a diet of Anglo-Saxon writers, reading this electrifying and startling novel entirely changed the way I thought about the written word. Morrison’s innovative and almost disturbing use of language to describe the haunting of a black American woman by the ghost of her daughter is a literary tour de force. The flavour of this book stays with you your whole life.

One Hundred Years of Solitude by Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Penguin India

A novel that almost single-handedly defined the genre of magic realism, Márquez’s labyrinthine novel describes the vicissitudes of the Buendia family in the mythical town of Macondo. In prose that is breathtaking and fantastical, and with an imagination that combines lyricism and lunacy, Márquez conveys the chaos and beauty of human life. To be read with caution.

The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy, Penguin India

Arundhati Roy’s novel may not have aged particularly well, but when I read it 25 years ago, I was mesmerized by her luminous prose and her fastidious attention to detail, almost like a seam-stress spinning a rainbow gown. A disturbing love story shackled by a sense of foreboding and disquiet.

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