Suresh Menon's Top 10 Reads

One of India’s leading cricket writers, Suresh Menon has authored books like Bishan: Portrait of a Cricketer and Pataudi: Nawab of Cricket. His latest collection of essays, Why Don’t You Write Something I Might Read: Reading Writing & Arrythmia explores how literature can change lives.

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One of India’s leading cricket writers, Suresh Menon has authored books like Bishan: Portrait of a Cricketer and Pataudi: Nawab of Cricket. His latest collection of essays, Why Don’t You Write Something I Might Read: Reading Writing & Arrythmia explores how literature can change lives.

A House for Mr Biswas by V.S. Naipaul, Picador

A novel at once sad and funny. Owning a house is a means of overcoming the twin ignominies of alienation and dependence. It is a sanctuary for the outsider who can fold in on himself and forget the rest of the world. This might apply to Mr Biswas’s country, Trinidad, too. Naipaul is at his best here, writing with insight and com- passion while still in his twenties.

 

Exact Thinking in Demented Times: The Vienna Circle and the Epic Quest for the Foundations of Science by Karl Sigmund, Basic Books 

I love group biographies of a time and place. In Vienna between the Wars, some brilliant minds came together to examine, reject and reorder theories in physics, mathematics and philosophy, even art and literature. The Vienna Circle was inventing modernity, which is fascinating enough, even without their personal stories, told here, of love, murder and betrayal.

 

A Corner of a Foreign Field: The Indian History of a British Sport by Ramachandra Guha, Penguin 

A favourite, this book is about India’s first great cricketer, Palwankar Baloo, born at the bottom rung of the caste hierarchy. But it’s much more: the story of the making of modern India itself. The great historian arrives at where we are today by a route usually ignored, wearing his erudition lightly.

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