Santanu Bhattacharya's 10 Favourite Books of all Time

Santanu Bhattacharya is the author of One Small Voice, which won the Observer Best Debut Novel in 2023. He also won the Desmond Elliott Prize Residency in the same year, and the Mo Siewcharran and Life Writing Prizes in 2021. His latest novel Deviants explores India’s changing attitudes towards homosexuality.

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Santanu Bhattacharya is the author of One Small Voice, which won the Observer Best Debut Novel in 2023. He also won the Desmond Elliott Prize Residency in the same year, and the Mo Siewcharran and Life Writing Prizes in 2021. His latest novel Deviants explores India’s changing attitudes towards homosexuality.

Friends in Small Places by Ruskin Bond, Penguin

I read avidly as a child, but looking back, this is the book that stands out. It is a collection of vignettes, each about a character who has left a lasting impression on the author. It beautifully evokes the sense of a small Himalayan town, of friendships forged with strangers along the path of life. As with Bond, the writing is simple, but the relationships hardly are.

English, August by Upamanyu Chatterjee, Faber & Faber

Agastya Sen is from the privileged circles of Delhi. When he cracks the civil service and is posted in a provincial town, he undergoes a journey of self-discovery and reckoning with his surroundings. This book mirrored my youth—a rebellious phase when I was acerbic about everything around me, impervious to my own shortcomings, and was gradually coming to terms with real life.

Trying to Grow by Firdaus Kanga, Penguin

Another teenage read that shaped me. Brit is a young boy with a physical condition. He lives with his mother in 1970s Bombay, and all is well until an attractive young man moves in next door. Way ahead of its time, this book explores desire, sexuality and disability in the most sassy and raucous ways.

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