Radhika Iyenger's 10 Favourite Reads of all time

Radhika Iyengar is an award-winning journalist based in Mumbai, who writes on arts and culture, marginalized communities, history and gender. Her debut work of non-fiction is Fire on the Ganges: Life Among the Dead in Banaras, which has been shortlisted for KLF Non-fiction Book Award.

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Radhika Iyengar is an award-winning journalist based in Mumbai, who writes on arts and culture, marginalized communities, history and gender. Her debut work of non-fiction is Fire on the Ganges: Life Among the Dead in Banaras, which has been shortlisted for KLF Non-fiction Book Award.

The Emperor of All Maladies: A Biography of Cancer By Siddhartha Mukherjee, Scribner

The protagonist of this Pulitzer Prize winning book is a life-threatening illness that colonizes our bodies in the most violent way: cancer. Mukherjee’s sharp writing, grounded in painstaking research, makes this an important contribution to medical journalism, and to our lives. I am in awe of this book because it makes this inscrutable illness slightly more understandable.

 

Joothan: An Untouchable’s Life by Om Prakash Valmiki (translated by Arun Prabha Mukherjee), Columbia University Press

Joothan provides an unsettling portrait of what it was like growing up as a Dalit in the ‘50s and ‘60s. Valmiki belonged to the Chuhra community, whose traditional occupation included sweeping the village and disposing animal carcasses. In one of the scenes in the book, Valmiki shares how his family cleaned cow sheds owned by oppressor castes and in lieu of payment, they were given leftover food or ‘joothan’.

 

Yellowface By R. F. Kuang, The Borough Press

June, a struggling author steals an unpublished manuscript written by a celebrated young author/quasi-friend, who dies in a bizarre accident. At its core, Yellowface is about literary theft but it also examines themes of racism, privilege and the shape-shifting persona of social media.

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