Children's literature in Southasia continues to remain a poor cousin of 'serious' literature for adults, in the minds of both authors and readers. This is despite
He worked on the first floor. There are quite a few Tibetans in Taipei, but he was the only one who had been hired by Ever Rising Printed Circuit Board
The death of Professor S R Siras, a reader in the Department of Modern Indian Languages at Aligarh Muslim University, has not seen the end of the well-deserved negative attention
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She was never much of a communicator, though she could coax anything from the ground. Vegetables, fruits, even some strange hybrids that she created over the years – the cool dankness
The 6 April killing of 76 personnel of the paramilitary Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) in a Maoist attack in Dantewada, in Chhattisgarh, is seen by many as a turning
Kaifi & I: A Memoir
by Shaukat Kaifi
edited & translated by Nasreen Rehman
Zubaan, 2010
This new work is a fascinating stroll down memory lane with the renowned theatre
The earlier book by this Buddhist monk-turned author, Buddhism without Beliefs, published in 1997, aroused with significant controversy, with critics accusing the author of having put forth arguments that could
For a community that has experienced such fragmentation through the centuries, the Punjabi identity today is engaged in a remarkably active attempt at consolidation.
There is no statuette
to measure the miles lovers
cover to torch a police station,
their down or breasts not fully grown
as the ideals they die for.
Hunger too