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.

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June, a struggling author steals an unpublished manuscript written by a celebrated young author/quasi-friend, who dies in a bizarre accident.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.

The Good Girls: An Ordinary Killing By Sonia Faleiro, Bloomsbury

With a sharp eye and rigorous reporting, Faleiro investigates the murder of two young Dalit girls, who were found dead, hanging from a tree in Uttar Pradesh. A true crime thriller, this book gripped me from the get go, detailing a critical account of women’s agency—and by extension, their safety—in India, through the lens of misogyny, ‘morality’ and patriarchal violence.

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