Remo Fernandes writes about meeting India’s former PM Rajiv Gandhi.
Browsing: Books
In Letter and Spirit!
The man who gave us the eternal optimist Charlie Brown, his philosophising canine Snoopy and the incorrigible Lucy remains one of the best cartoonists we’ve ever seen
You have to break down your performance shot by shot, you have to understand your opponent down to the slight frown on her face, writes Pullela Gopichand in his autobiography Shuttler’s Flick
G Venu’s latest book ‘Arangilum, Munnilum Pinnilum’ is a deep exploration of the abhinaya guru’s artistic and instructional journey.
A handful of school stories that take you back to those carefree days of childhood abound.
In his book Pride Prejudice and Punditry, Shashi Tharoor writes about how the books he read as a child and the word puzzles he played helped him become the wordsmith he is today.
Making people laugh and forget their cares is probably the most difficult craft. However, some of the terrific humour writers have done just that
Gender equality is still a distant dream in South Asia even today, writes Upinder Singh in ‘Ancient India’.
A tribute to the life and works of the master humorist, PG Wodehouse.
Goopy Gyne Bagha Byne became a strong sociopolitical commentary on the notion of war and peace, writes Bhaskar Chattopadhyay in ‘The Cinema Of Satyajit Ray’.