Sowmiya Ashok on her Ten Favourite Books

Sowmiya Ashok is a journalist and author of the critically acclaimed book The Dig: Keeladi and The Politics of India's Past (2025). She has been a correspondent for leading Indian dailies such as The Hindu and The Indian Express, reporting on politics, environment and culture. She has reported from the U.S., China, Taiwan and Sri Lanka.  

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Sowmiya Ashok is a journalist and author of the critically acclaimed book The Dig: Keeladi and The Politics of India's Past (2025). She has been a correspondent for leading Indian dailies such as The Hindu and The Indian Express, reporting on politics, environment and culture. She has reported from the U.S., China, Taiwan and Sri Lanka.  

Country Driving: A Chinese Road Trip by Peter Hessler, Canongate Books

After living in China for years and learning the language, Hessler decides to get himself a Chinese driver’s licence. What follows is a brilliant travelogue which is deeply instructive on the human side of the economic revolution in China. I’ve loved everything Hessler has written from China, but this is my favourite for its delightful observational writing. I felt I was in the passenger seat of his rental car as he drove across the country.

Palestinian Walks: Notes on a Vanishing Landscape by Raja Shehadeh, Profile Books

Shehadeh offers a poignant account of the transformation of the Palestinian landscapes around his home in the West Bank. It’s a countryside he has known since his childhood, and one he has watched being destroyed by the expansion of Israeli settlements. The book also explores the Arabic concept of sarha, a practice of leisurely, aimless wandering in nature to free the mind and soul and reflects on how such freedoms are impossible under occupation. I was shaken by how well he describes the destruction of his ‘home’ in all its forms.

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