A Look At Srinivas Reddy's Bookshelf

A scholar, translator and musician, Srinivas shares his childhood faves.

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A scholar, translator and musician, Srinivas shares his childhood faves.

Scholar, translator and musician, Srinivas Reddy trained in classical South Asian languages -- Sanskrit, Tamil and Telugu -- and literature. His books include the English translations of Krishnadevaraya's epic Amuktamalyada; and Kalidasa's Malavikagnimitram and Meghadutam. Next up is a biography of the Vijayanagara emperor Krishnadevaraya. Reddy lives in Rhode Island and teaches at Brown University.

The Book of Three (Lloyd Alexander, Square Fish, Rs 530)

Filled with adventure, magic, myth and humour, this was my very first fantasy story and I was hooked. Part of The Chronicles of Prydain series, it's a classic coming-of-age story set in Lloyd Alexander's reimagined world of Welsh mythology.

To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee, Random House UK, Rs 399)

A quintessential American novel, and another moving coming-of-age tale. I read this classic as a boy but Scout, Atticus and Boo are still with me. Some characters truly become part of your childhood.

The Tao of Physics (Fritjof Capra, Shambhala, Rs 2,000)

My father gave me this book when I was a college student grappling with divergent interests in science, art and spirituality. Capra brought it all together into one harmonious vision of the universe.

Letters to a Young Poet (Rainer Maria Rilke, Penguin Classics, Rs 450)

Rilke deeply inspired me when I was a young artist; he exhorted: "Go into yourself. Find out the reason that commands you to write; see whether it has spread its roots into the very depths of your heart …" This book of letters soon led me to his sublime poetry.

Hymns for the Drowning (Nammalvar, translated by A. K. Ramanujan, Penguin Classics, Rs 250)

A. K. Ramanujan is one of my academic idols. This book, like many of his other works, showed me how deep and insightf...

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