What's on Prashanth Srivatsa's Top-10 Books List?

Coimbatore-born Prashanth Srivatsa is a science fiction/fantasy writer whose stories have appeared in magazines such as Asimov’s, Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction and Three-Lobed Burning Eye, among others. Prashanth’s debut fantasy novel, The Spice Gate chronicles the journey of Amir, a young man born with special abilities who unravels the power that keeps the world in balance.

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Coimbatore-born Prashanth Srivatsa is a science fiction/fantasy writer whose stories have appeared in magazines such as Asimov’s, Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction and Three-Lobed Burning Eye, among others. Prashanth’s debut fantasy novel, The Spice Gate chronicles the journey of Amir, a young man born with special abilities who unravels the power that keeps the world in balance.

Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino, Vintage Classics

A timeless book, an ode to travel and cities. Marco Polo’s adventures told cryptically to Kublai Khan serve as a reminder of what it means to leave our home, and sometimes, what it means to return to it. A marvellous feat of imagination.

Pedro Paramo by Juan Rulfo, Profile Books

A beautiful, haunting, bizarre novel, set in the town of Comala in Mexico, and my favourite read this year. Written in a fractal, non-linear structure, the story plays between life and death, between past and present. It is a story of forgotten lives, and the envy of every writer who dreams of enchanting their reader.

Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel, Fourth Estate

A poignant, often witty, and always clever account of the life of statesman and lawyer Thomas Cromwell, in service of Henry VIII. Wolf Hall and its sequels are arguably the greatest novels I have ever read, in no small part to its richness of character, place and the sheer wealth of language at Mantel’s disposal.

Gormenghast by Mervyn Peake, Vintage Classics

Few books have had the kind of influence on my writing as Peake’s <...

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