Narayani Basu's 10 Favourite Books of all Time

Historian and foreign policy analyst, Narayani Basu is the author of the critically acclaimed biography V. P. Menon: The Unsung Architect of Modern India (2020) and Allegiance: Azaadi and the End of Empire (2022). Her most recent release is A Man For All Seasons: The Life Of K. M. Panikkar.

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Historian and foreign policy analyst, Narayani Basu is the author of the critically acclaimed biography V. P. Menon: The Unsung Architect of Modern India (2020) and Allegiance: Azaadi and the End of Empire (2022). Her most recent release is A Man For All Seasons: The Life Of K. M. Panikkar.

The Return by Hisham Matar, Penguin

At its heart, this is not a memoir. It’s a journey, not just back to Libya to try and understand the truth behind a father’s disappearance, but through loss and love. It’s also about home—about the different versions of it we find or build in our lifetimes. I love all of Matar’s writing, but this one has stayed with me for a long time.

A Spy Among Friends: Kim Philby and the Great Betrayal by Ben Macintyre, Bloomsbury

Espionage is one of my favourite genres in non-fiction and nobody does it as deftly and with such flair for detail as Ben Macintyre. This one is the story of the spy, Kim Philby: Cambridge graduate, clubman, cricket enthusiast, bon viveur and tireless party-thrower, ace undercover agent—and a supreme double agent during the Cold War.

Rebecca by Daphne du Maurier, Virago

There is nothing by her that I do not love, but this Gothic romance is a classic from du Maurier: the story of a young bride haunted by the shadow of her older husband’s first wife. From the opening sentence—“Last night I dreamed I went to Manderley again”—to its final act, this is a book that is hard to put down and harder to forget.

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