Tejaswini Apte-Rahm's Favourite Reads of All Time

Tejaswini Apte-Rahm is the author of the award-winning debut novel The Secret of More—a rags-to-riches story set against the booming textile industry and the newly-emerging silent-film era of colonial Bombay—and the short-story collection These Circuses That Sweep Through the Landscape.

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Tejaswini Apte-Rahm is the author of the award-winning debut novel The Secret of More—a rags-to-riches story set against the booming textile industry and the newly-emerging silent-film era of colonial Bombay—and the short-story collection These Circuses That Sweep Through the Landscape.

Goodbye Mr Chips By James Hilton, Hodder Paperbacks, 

This slim novella tells the life story of an English boarding school teacher over several decades, including the world wars. Hilton brings to life the grand sweep of history, and the vanishing of eras, without budging from the location of a countryside school.

How Not to Write a Novel By Howard Mittelmark and Sandra Newman, Harper Perennial, 

One of those rare books that makes me laugh out loud. It goes through classic mistakes made by writers, dealing with plot, character and style. Hilarious commentary accompanies every possible example of bad writing and cliché that most attentive readers (and indeed film-lovers) would have come across at some point.

84 Charing Cross Road By Helene Hanff, Virago, 

A charming epistolary novel set in the post-WWII years. A writer in New York writes to an antiquarian bookseller in London to order books by mail. It’s a real treat to see his stiff formality melting in the face of her friendliness, while his reticence is clearly something that charms her.

Jane Eyre By Charlotte Bronte, Fingerprint! Publishing, 

My comfort read. I go back to it again and ...

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