South Asian Literature discussion

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Reading and Writing > What are you reading right now?

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message 2: by Somdutta (new)

Somdutta | 3 comments I am reading Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens and Journey To The Center of the Earth by Jules Verne.


message 3: by Amalie (new)

Amalie I thought we should mention only the writing by South Asian writers... I'm reading The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield. I also have The Slaveby Isaac Bashevis Singer and the Sinhala translation of "Fragments: Memories of a Wartime Childhood" by Binjamin Wilkomirski in my currently-reading shelf. At the same time I'm finishing Dead Soulswith my group.


message 4: by Amina (new)

Amina (aminamania) | 31 comments Mod
Amalie wrote: "I thought we should mention only the writing by South Asian writers... I'm reading The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield. I also have The Slaveby [author:Isaac Bashevis..."

Wow, you're reading a lot. Ideally, we'll focus on South Asian literature here but people are welcome to mention other books too.


message 5: by ash (last edited Aug 23, 2011 05:12PM) (new)

ash (ahowz) I'm currently reading Bones of the Master: a Journey to Secret Mongolia by George Crane

I first read this nonfiction book in my university course: Asian Spiritual Disciplines. It's such an inspiring account I just had to read it again!


message 6: by ash (new)

ash (ahowz) I'm also reading Bikram Yoga: The Guru Behind Hot Yoga Shows the Way to Radiant Health and Personal Fulfillment by Bikram Choudhury -- I love this type of yoga and I'm attempting to master it! :)


message 7: by Amalie (new)

Amalie I'm currently reading Running in the Family by Michael Ondaatje. Hilarious! (Ok, may be not hilarious, but funny :)


message 8: by Sharan (new)

Sharan (pksidhu) | 2 comments I am currently reading Animal's People: A Novel. My first South Asian subject by a S.A. author since I joined this group. :D


message 9: by Siddharth (new)

Siddharth Sharma (thegreyshades) | 4 comments Sacred Games by Vikram Chandra.


message 10: by Katarzyna (new)

Katarzyna (gabonga) | 3 comments I am reading now Sea of Poppies by Amitav Gosh and The Translator by Leila Aboulela. The second one is egiption writer. She is a winner of the Caine Prize for African Writing. The Translator also was shortlisted to many prizes, but my opinion is that the book is rather not good. Poppies is much better, but somebody told me that it is the first part of longer saga which wasn't published yet.


message 11: by Katarzyna (new)

Katarzyna (gabonga) | 3 comments Sharan wrote: "I am currently reading Animal's People: A Novel. My first South Asian subject by a S.A. author since I joined this group. :D"

It's perfect. Maybe not at the beginning, but it is developing in really thrilling and sometimes schocking way. Good choice


message 12: by Sharan (new)

Sharan (pksidhu) | 2 comments Thanks Katarzyna. I found the book really interesting. Especially the few rants Animal has on social norms in 'backwards' India (like on stool studies >:D). I was shocked that his 'lund' becomes a minor character, but hey, I guess that's what makes him just like all the other kids.


message 13: by Julie (new)

Julie Fee (caverjules) | 3 comments Sharan wrote: "I am currently reading Animal's People: A Novel. My first South Asian subject by a S.A. author since I joined this group. :D"

I loved Animal's People. I was only sad it was so short! :)


message 14: by Amalie (new)

Amalie I'm currently reading One Amazing Thing by Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni. I'm loving it at the moment!


message 15: by Amina (new)

Amina (aminamania) | 31 comments Mod
I just found out I'll be getting a review copy of Arundhati Roy's new book Walking With The Comrades this week. I can't wait to start it. Any other A. Roy fans out there?


message 17: by Amina (new)

Amina (aminamania) | 31 comments Mod
I really enjoyed Radio Shangri-La. What do you think of it so far, Tara?


message 18: by Tara (new)

Tara Hi Amina. I am about halfway through the book and I am really enjoying it! Makes me want to go to Bhutan! :)


message 19: by Mary (new)

Mary (meare) | 8 comments I just started "Tell it to the Trees" By Anita Rau Badami. I've read her other books and highly recommend them. Can't wait to sink my teeth into this one.


message 20: by Mary (new)

Mary (meare) | 8 comments Amina wrote: "I'm reading Miss Timmins' School for Girls by Nayana Currimbhoy."

Do you like it? I couldn't get through it. i was really looking forward to it.


message 21: by Amina (new)

Amina (aminamania) | 31 comments Mod
Mary wrote: "Amina wrote: "I'm reading Miss Timmins' School for Girls by Nayana Currimbhoy."

Do you like it? I couldn't get through it. i was really looking forward to it."


I read it last summer and actually liked it. It did get a bit tedious toward the end of the middle, but I liked how it turned out as a whole.


message 22: by Ming (new)

Ming | 14 comments Just finished White Tiger by Aravind Adiga. It has a raw and biting tone. I'm about to start What the Body Remembers by Shauna Singh Baldwin.


message 23: by Mary (new)

Mary (meare) | 8 comments Finished "Tell it to the Trees". Should have been good but wasn't. Bummer.


message 24: by Mary (new)

Mary (meare) | 8 comments Just finished Serious Men by Joseph Manu. Very satirical, funny


message 25: by Mary (new)

Mary (meare) | 8 comments also just finished The Sweetness of Tears. Enjoyable but predictable at times.


message 26: by Luaunna (new)

Luaunna | 33 comments has anyone read the English translation of seven 6's are 43 by Kiran Nagarkar?


message 27: by Shaheen (new)

Shaheen Ashraf-Ahmed | 14 comments I am trying to read Cloud Atlas, but am distracted by writing/launching my own books. However, I really loved The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet, so I have high hopes of this next Mitchell novel. I have just found a ton of good desi lit on these threads, so I have a good stock of books to turn to next!


message 28: by Luaunna (new)

Luaunna | 33 comments I am currently reading the World we Found by T Umrigar.


message 29: by Susan (new)

Susan Oleksiw | 26 comments I just finished The Cosmic Clues by Manjiri Prabhu, a very light mystery set in Pune and featuring Sonia Samarth. It's really a series of short stories connected by Sonia, an investigator who uses astrology, and her group of friends and contacts. Light reading to balance the craziness of the season.


message 30: by Lara (new)

Lara Zuberi (larazuberi) | 20 comments Just finished Life of Pi, beautifully written..am wondering if the movie has lived up to it..looking forward to watching it though I am never able to compare a book to a movie; forgive the cliche, but its like apples and oranges. I just want the movie makers to do justice to the writer's imagination.


message 31: by Nikunj (new)

Nikunj (91ku9j) | 2 comments Currently reading India : A History by John Keay and The Moor's Last Sigh by Salman Rushdie.

Would love some suggestions as in what to read next.


message 32: by Amina (new)

Amina (aminamania) | 31 comments Mod
I'm in the middle of Katherine Boo's Behind the Beautiful Forevers. Wow. I'm hooked. Anyone else read/reading it?


message 33: by Shakera (new)

Shakera | 2 comments This book is awesome! one of my favorite books ever!!! it is golden!


message 34: by Shakera (new)

Shakera | 2 comments I am reading Humsafar's translation, it is the one written by Hameeda Hussain Raipuri....so far, I am mesmerized by it's beauty


message 35: by Ming (new)

Ming | 14 comments I am starting City of Devi by Manil Suri. I've been waiting for this for so long. Nice to sink my teeth into it. http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/13...


message 36: by Susan (new)

Susan Oleksiw | 26 comments I'm reading Video: Stories by Meena Nair. They're excellent; I think this is her first book.


message 37: by Paulash (new)

Paulash (pbanerjee04) | 2 comments You people are too smart for me. I'm reading The Bro Code.


message 38: by Zen (new)

Zen (bravery) | 5 comments I'm reading The Magic of Saida! It's slow, but still really good... kinda par for the course with Vassanji.


message 39: by Lara (new)

Lara Zuberi (larazuberi) | 20 comments Just picked up broken verses by kamila shamsie from the library..


message 40: by Elisa (new)

Elisa (Elusa) | 5 comments currently I'm reading, India: A Sacred Geoggraphy, by Diana L. Eck. Amazing book. I'm also rereading Vikram Seth's A Suitable Boy, my favorite novel of all time, in preparation for Seth's new novel, due out this year, A Suitable Girl. Can't wait!


message 41: by Elisa (new)

Elisa (Elusa) | 5 comments Amina, I too recently read Behind The Beautiful Forevers. It was the first book in some time, despite being beautifully written, that took me several weeks to finish. The pain and hopelessness of the children was palpable. I found myself having to walk away from it a few days at a time to avoid feeling overwhelmed. A profound, powerful, and necessary book.


message 42: by Zohaib (new)

Zohaib Hayat | 5 comments Elisa, I second you on Behind the Beautiful Forevers. It is a beautifully written book but is extremely difficult to read.

I just read Jamil Ahmad's The Wandering Falcon. Although written in the 1970s by a retired Pakistani government servant, TWF is a refreshing read. I have the Beautiful and the Damned on my reading list.


message 43: by Susie (new)

Susie Sigel | 3 comments I read Behind the Beautiful Forevers recently on my Nook. I popped the extra dollar for the video clips and I am so glad. Gave faces to these unforgetable characters.


message 44: by Shaheen (new)

Shaheen Ashraf-Ahmed | 14 comments Just bought The Thing About Thugs, by Tabish Khair. Don't quite know what to expect, but was intrigued by a mini-review in the New Yorker.


message 45: by Zen (new)

Zen (bravery) | 5 comments @ Shaheen: I'm going to check that one out, thanks!


message 46: by Elisa (new)

Elisa (Elusa) | 5 comments Susie, I too read, Behind The Beautiful Forevers, on my nook and added the video clips. The open, honest faces of the children, who share the same hopes and dreams of children the world over are truly unforgettable.


message 47: by Lara (new)

Lara Zuberi (larazuberi) | 20 comments Just finished cutting for stone. Many of you have probably read it already, but if you haven't, you must. It's become one of my favorites among contemporary lit fiction, and it has a beautiful southasian/Ethiopian/Indian flavor.


message 48: by Elisa (new)

Elisa (Elusa) | 5 comments Lara, I read Cutting For Stone last year and loved it. You might also enjoy My Own Country, and The Tennis Partner, books also written by Verghese. They too are excellent reads, and autobiographical in nature as they focus on two different periods in his life.


message 49: by Lara (new)

Lara Zuberi (larazuberi) | 20 comments Elisa thanks for the recs..will definitely add these 2 to my list. How does he find the time to write, I wonder.


message 50: by Ming (last edited Mar 19, 2013 09:58PM) (new)

Ming | 14 comments I am reading Partitions by Amit Majmudar. This is his debut novel after having released two books of poetry. His talent as a poet translates beautifully in a novel form as he conveys a well-balanced perspective of the suffering and horrors. His new book, Abundance, just came out. I will be reading that one soon.


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