A Look At Shashi Tharoor's Bookshelf

The politician and former international civil servant shares his ten favourite books.

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The politician and former international civil servant shares his ten favourite books.

An author, politician and former international civil servant, Shashi Tharoor straddles several worlds of experience. Currently a second-term Lok Sabha Member of Parliament (MP), he has also had a three-decade long career at the United Nations. Tharoor is an award-winning author of 16 books, both fiction and non-fiction.

One Hundred Years of Solitude (Gabriel Garcia Marquez, Penguin India, Rs 399)

Magnificent, uplifting and profoundly moving, sweeping in its recreation of a magical world of never-ending enchantment, the "novel of the century".

The Argumentative Indian (Amartya Sen, Penguin UK, Rs 399)

Wonderfully written, lucidly argued, meticulously researched and thoughtfully constructed essays on essential aspects of Indian intellectual and cultural life by the Nobelist and polymath. Illuminating and humane.

Midnight's Children (Salman Rushdie, Random House UK, Rs 499)

I reviewed this book when it came out in 1981 and called it "The Great Indian Novel", a title I misappropriated for my own fictional debut eight years later. But this was the novel that expanded the realm of the possible in Indian English writing, lifting the literary shackles for the generations to follow. A masterpiece.

The Legends of Khasak (O. V. Vijayan, Penguin India, Rs 250)

Well before Garcia Marquez's genius touched Indian minds in the English translation, an author-cartoonist had invented magical realism in Malayalam, in this fantastic yet searing tale of a Kerala village schoolteacher. A genuine classic.

The Mahabharata of Vyasa (transcreated by P. Lal, Writers Workshop)

A wonderfully racy, contemporary translation of the timeless epic, melding poetry and prose and full of contemporary idiom, Prof Lal's is unarguably the best and most readable English-language vers...

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