Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi's All-Time Favourite Reads

Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi’s debut novel, The Last Song of Dusk (2004), won the Betty Trask Award. A former contributor to The New York Times, Shanghvi’s most recent book is The Rabbit & The Squirrel. A memoir, Loss, is forthcoming this summer

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Siddharth Dhanvant Shanghvi’s debut novel, The Last Song of Dusk (2004), won the Betty Trask Award. A former contributor to The New York Times, Shanghvi’s most recent book is The Rabbit & The Squirrel. A memoir, Loss, is forthcoming this summer

The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje, Bloomsbury Publishing, Rs 499 

“We die containing a richness of lovers and tribes, tastes we have swallowed, bodies we have plunged into and swum up as if rivers of wisdom, characters we have climbed into as if trees, fears we have hidden in as if caves.” Michael Ondaatje’s serai of broken souls seeking rescue, correction, redemption, solace, this book has the presence of an opera.

 

Beloved by Toni Morrison, RHUK, Rs 499

Toni Morrison legitimizes an invisible and challenging thing: the friendship between a living person and a ghost in this book which recreates the private cosmology of a band of former slaves united by love or horror or liberation.

 

Light Years by James Salter, Penguin Modern Classics, Rs 499 

James Salter is a paragon of elegance. This is the story of Viri and Nedra, and their marriage afflicted by inertia. It is also about how we suffer regardless of our lot—in big beautiful houses, at dinner tables with friends, around lovers. Salter proves middle-class life is another kind of enslavement—what’s tragic is that it is voluntary.

 

Kitchen by Banana Yoshimoto, Faber & Faber, Rs 499

Banana Yoshimoto draws from the whirlpool of modern Japanese life—where emotion fails reason, with an abiding weight that the world we inhabit is a thing of glittering deceits.

 

Brokeback Mountain by Annie Proulx, Scribner, Rs 410 

A blue sky, a river, gorse and adder enter stories of American life that is brutal, isolated and without love—except when you read Brokeback Mountain. Then it’s love all the way, the kind that can k...

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