Ruchir Joshi on his Favourite Childhood Reads

Ruchir Joshi is a Kolkata-based writer, filmmaker and columnist known for his genre-bending debut novel The Last Jet-Engine Laugh, his sharp political chronicle Poriborton! and his award-winning films, Eleven Miles and Tales from Planet Kolkata. His new novel, The Great Eastern Hotel (HarperCollins) released in February 2025.

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Ruchir Joshi is a Kolkata-based writer, filmmaker and columnist known for his genre-bending debut novel The Last Jet-Engine Laugh, his sharp political chronicle Poriborton! and his award-winning films, Eleven Miles and Tales from Planet Kolkata. His new novel, The Great Eastern Hotel (HarperCollins) released in February 2025.

I believe you’re owned by different bookshelves at different periods in your life. Here is a totting up of the books that formed me till adulthood.

The Mystery of the Missing Man by Enid Blyton, Hachette 

I must have been about eight or nine, and down with measles that stopped me going to school or doing any vigorous physical activity. My mother thought this might be a good time to get me into books. I was skeptical when I began reading. By the time I finished the book I was almost crying with the desire to be a kid in rural southern England, sniffing around detectively with the Five Find-Outers.

The Guns of Navarone and Where Eagles Dare by Alistair Maclean, HarperCollins; Cade by James Hadley Chase, Mastermind Publication

The buying of new books was cut off pretty soon and I was enrolled into the lending library that sat at the back of the Oxford Book Store on Park Street. I ran through most of the twee and racist, but neverthless gripping, Blyton Aunty, and likewise most of the Agatha Christies before I tripped into the adult thriller-world of British violent-suspense merchants. I tore through all of Alistair Maclean, and started picking up the ‘dirty thrillers’ by the prolific James Hadley Chase.

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