10 Books Close To Nilanjana S. Roy's Heart

 The award-winning author lists her favourite, formative books.

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 The award-winning author lists her favourite, formative books.

Nilanjana S. Roy is the author of the award-winning The Wildings (2012) and The Hundred Names of Darkness (2013). Her essays on reading are collected in The Girl Who Ate Books (2016), and she has edited two anthologies. She writes on books, life and art for The Financial Times. She's warming up slowly, but pleasantly, to the writing life, after many happy years as a reader and editor. Her most recent work is Black River (2022).

Frankenstein by Mary Shelley, Scholastic

The past is never that far off, and Frankenstein retains its electric charge, especially in the 1818 edition, with its setting in the frozen waters of the Arctic. Any modern story about robots and AI—what we create and love, even when they might destroy us—is in her debt.

Five Plays by Mahasweta Devi, Seagull Books

She is probably better read in Bengali, but for English speakers, Five Plays gives you a glimpse of Mahasweta Devi's extraordinary range, that powerful voice of conscience and humanity, from Mother of 1084 to Bayen.

Into That Darkness: An Examination of Conscience by Gitta Sereny, Vintage

Sereny interviewed Franz Stangl, commandant of Treblinka, patiently, "with determination to question but not to hurt". Evil was not something external to us, she believed; it was a choice, a failure to t...

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