Samit Basu's Favourites

A peek into the fantasy writer's bookshelf.

offline
A peek into the fantasy writer's bookshelf.

Samit Basu has been writing novels for the past 15 years. Dropping out of the coveted Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad to write the first part of his bestselling fantasy series, The GameWorld Trilogy, Basu went on to author the international award-winning speculative novels Turbulence and Resistance, and a children's series, The Adventures of Stoob.

1984 (George Orwell, General Press, Rs 195)

Great science fiction's job is not to accurately predict the future. Alternate fictional universes are meant to be mirrors that help us see our world. Orwell's vision of a propaganda-led, totalitarian-worshipping and utterly amoral future is still clear and true. I was young when I read this, and was relieved none of it could happen.

The Select Nonsense of Sukumar Ray (translated by Sukanta Chaudhuri, Oxford University Press, Rs 295)

Carroll, Seuss/Gissell, Nash, Lear: Ray's children's classics match the best of these masters, and his other works reveal an immense ability for dark satire, both political and social. A lot is lost in translation, but what resonates when you read the originals is a confidence very few other Indian storytellers possess. 

Men At Arms (Terry Pratchett, Random House UK, Rs 399)

Sir Terry's Discworld, a multicultural fantasy universe, was the inspiration for the setting of my first novel. Men At Arms is the second book of the City Watch trilogy, a great way to begin your journey into this massive universe. Pratchett's stories are multi-dimensional, funny, dramatic, wise and deeply human. I wouldn't have created a diverse world of fantasy had it not been for him.

The Talisman Ring (Georgette Heyer, Random House UK, Rs 399)

I'm very grateful that my childhood reading was completely unsupervised, because if I'd only read 'boy's books...

Read more!