Amitava Kumar's Favourite 10

An author of several books of non-fiction and two novels, Kumar's writing has appeared in Harper's magazine, The Guardian, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair and The New York Times. He teaches English at Vassar College, New York.

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An author of several books of non-fiction and two novels, Kumar's writing has appeared in Harper's magazine, The Guardian, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair and The New York Times. He teaches English at Vassar College, New York.

Amitava Kumar is the author of several works of non-fiction and two novels. His forthcoming book Immigrant, Montana: A Novel (Knopf, US, and Faber, UK) was recently published in India as The Lovers (Aleph). His essay 'Pyre', published in Granta, was selected for Best American Essays 2016. Kumar's writing has appeared in Harper's magazine, The Guardian, The New Yorker, Vanity Fair and The New York Times. He teaches English at Vassar College, New York.

Finding the Centre: Two Narratives (V. S. Naipaul, HarperCollins, Rs 350)

I'm guilty of reading the less popular books by writers justly famous for their wide body of work. Naipaul's A House for Mr Biswas is a masterpiece of 20th-century fiction but a book of his I've read many more times is Finding the Centre. The latter is a mix of travel writing and memoir. I keep going back to it because it introduced me to the drama or the act of becoming a writer. ("Such anxiety; such ambition.")

Waiting for the Barbarians (J. M. Coetzee, Random House UK, Rs 780)

I read Coetzee as a graduate student 30 years ago. Coetzee was writing when the brutal apartheid regime in South Africa hadn't yet come to an end but his novel reads more like a parable about another, unnamed place, or maybe, more accurately, a universal story that would hold true as much in Pretoria as in, say, Patna.

Beloved (Toni Morrison, Random House UK, Rs 499)

The God of Small Things (Arundhati Roy, Penguin India, Rs 450)

The iron in the soul is a way of seeing the world for what it is. I find it also in Morrison and Roy but these two writers have an additional quality I envy. Both show their skill in these novels at spinning out the vernacular or common speech while, on other pages, letting their language take flig...

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