Top four books

Anita NairAuthor 1. Just William series By Richmal Crompton 38 books about 11-year-old mischievous school b
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Anita NairAuthor

1. Just William series

By Richmal Crompton

38 books about 11-year-old mischievous school boy William Brown, who lives in a village between Marleigh and Hadley.

2. The Coral Island

By R M Ballantyne

Story of three boys who survive a shipwreck on a Polynesian coral reef, set during the peak of the British Empire.

3. Panchatantra

By Vishnu Sharma

Ancient collection of inter-related animal fables in verse and prose, with morals.

4. The Adrian Mole series

By Sue Townsend

The diary of an adolescent young boy. Realistic and humorous.

Zac O’Yeah      Author, Crime Fiction

1. The Inhuman Condition

By Clive Barker

Book IV of the six-volume Books of Blood is a novel of surrealistic terror, inspiring panic and evoking revulsion and delight.

2. Love and Longing in Bombay

By Vikram Chandra

Five stories on love, ghosts, etc, spun by an elusive narrator in a Mumbai bar.

3. Mr X

By Peter Straub

As Ned explores his past, he’s accused of crimes, and must face his deepest nightmares.

4. Devil in a Blue Dress

By Walter Mosley

LA, 1948: Easy Rawlins, a black war hero, loses his job and is offered good money by a white man to find a blonde.

Jaishree Misra    Author

1. A Casual Vacancy

By J K Rowling

The eagerly-awaited new novel for adults by the creator of Harry Potter.

2. The Sense of an Ending

By Julian Barnes

This 2011 Booker winner follows a middle-aged man as he contends with his past — until childhood friends return with a vengeance.

3. River of Smoke

By Amitav Ghosh

Part II of the historical Ibis trilogy continues the story of 19th century drug trade.

4. Case Histories

By Kate Atkinson

Former policewoman Brodie investigates three seemingly unconnected family tragedies.

Advaita Kala    Author & Scriptwriter

1. The Secret History

By Donna Tartt

Six former classics students at an elite Vermont college reflect on the murder of one of them.

2. People Who Eat Darkness

By Richard Lloyd Parry

Asia editor of The Times probes the murder of 21-

year-old Lucie Blackman in summer 2000, Tokyo.

3. The Householder

By Amitabha Bagchi

Second novel by IITian, on shifting definitions of morality in a corrupt world, about a man who finds demands of being a man weighing him down.

4. The Napoleon of Crime

By Ben Macintyre

The true story of Adam Worth, a Victorian masterthief, model for Conan Doyle’s Moriarty.

Namita Gokhale    Author & Founder, Jaipur LitFest

1. IQ84

By Haruki Murakami

A love story, a novel of self-discovery, a dystopia to rival Orwell’s —1Q84 is Murakami’s most ambitious book yet.

2. Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking

By Susan Cain

Passionately argued, with indelible stories of real people, Cain shows how we undervalue introverts.

3. The Resignation (Tyagpatra)

By Jainendra

The story of Mrinal, whose uncompromising idealism makes her a social outcast.

4. Difficult Pleasures

By Anjum Hasan

A collection of stories about the need to escape and the longing to belong.

Pushpesh Pant    Social Scientist and Author

1. The Better Angels of Our Nature

By Steven Pinker

Pinker explores the essence of human nature, to paint a counterintutive picture of an increasingly nonviolent world.

2. Nivedan

By Dharmanand Kosambi

The autobiography of the Buddhist scholar and a Pāli language expert, just translated from Marathi.

3. The Monk, the Moor and Moses Ben Jalloun

By Saeed Akhtar Mirza

A stimulating review of Islam’s contribution to human civilisation.

4. Letters to a Young Poet

By Rainer Maria Rilke

Letter-poems to Franz Kappus, written during 1903-08.

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