Sejal Mehta's Top 10 Reads

Through her work with Marine Life of Mumbai, a citizen-led initiative raising awareness about the city’s coastal biodiversity, journalist and editor Sejal Mehta has been making science accessible for lay audiences. She does much the same with her new book, Superpowers on the Shore.

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Through her work with Marine Life of Mumbai, a citizen-led initiative raising awareness about the city’s coastal biodiversity, journalist and editor Sejal Mehta has been making science accessible for lay audiences. She does much the same with her new book, Superpowers on the Shore.

A Walk in the Woods by Bill Bryson, Vayu Education of India

Bryson reminds us how vital humour is in non-fiction in this travelogue that takes us through the author’s insightful, educational and consistently hilarious journey along the Appalachian Trail. Sequences where he ponders the possibilities of being attacked by bears are laugh-out-loud funny, followed by moments of deep in- sight about an unfamiliar ecosystem that he ends up feeling a deep kinship with.

 

Ghachar Ghochar by Vivek Shanbag, HarperCollins

Originally written in Kannada, and translated masterfully by Srinath Perur, this story expertly weaves together fam- ily life, the ebb and flow of wealth, class anxiety and social ambition. The title loosely translates to ‘tangled beyond repair,’ a nonsense phrase the narrator learns from his wife. It’s the little observations that held me captive—the slight shifts in relationships at home, the way their memories explore life with and without money. Absolutely beautiful.

 

The Extreme Life of The Sea by Anthony R. and Stephen Palumbi, Princeton University Press

A glorious example of science communication about creatures of the deep, the authors take us on a deep dive with beautiful sentences: “The dark unnerves us. Whether it’s in the space below the stairs or beyond the campfire’s edge, people are nervous about surprises that lurk unseen. The deepest reaches of the sea are really akin to life on another planet [...] Crushing pressures, deep cold and eternal darkness rule the world’s basement.”

 

On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft by Stephen King, Hodder Paperbacks

While King is known for his horror stories, there are parts of this book—part life navigation and part writing masterclass—that I...

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