Top Picks From Gopalkrishna Gandhi's Bookshelf

Gopalkrishna Gandhi is the author of Refuge, a novel on Tamil plantation workers in Ceylon. He has also written Dara Shukoh, a play about the tragic Moghul Prince, and a book-length essay titled The Death Penalty. His reading belongs to his generation, now in its seventies and eighties. 

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Gopalkrishna Gandhi is the author of Refuge, a novel on Tamil plantation workers in Ceylon. He has also written Dara Shukoh, a play about the tragic Moghul Prince, and a book-length essay titled The Death Penalty. His reading belongs to his generation, now in its seventies and eighties. 

Oliver Twist  BY CHARLES DICKENS, Penguin Classics, Rs 250 

This 1838 novel— an orphan’s story—is universal and timeless, because precarious living is also exactly that. The shadowy lives in the story’s dimly lit, bizarre setting have stayed with me from the time I was Oliver’s age—nine. 

Abraham Lincoln BY CARL SANDBURG, Galahad Books, Rs 5435 

This selection is not because Sandburg won a Pulitzer for this 1939 biography but because it is one of the best biographies ever written—with a sense of the vulnerability of its subject and the certainty that one day his country, which has venerated him, will come close to forsaking him and be saved by an eyelash from doing so. 

The Good Earth BY PEARL S. BUCK, Simon & Schuster, Rs 225 

In 2004, Oprah Winfrey chose for her book club this deeply moving novel that Buck wrote back in 1931, returning it to bestseller status. Set in a Chinese village, Buck’s story speaks of famine, riots, war, love, betrayal and survival. Buck, who grew up in China as the daughter of missionaries, knew that country well but she knew even more about human nature, its failings and its amazing redemptions. 

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