Millennium Post

APRIL 2018:

THE MONTH FOR FICTION LOVERS

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Amazing are the experiment­s happening in contempora­ry publishing here. If non-fiction and celeb-centric books ruled the roost in March, there is enough reason for fiction lovers to rejoice as the upcoming month will see the release of some outstandin­g novels. From October 2017 onwards, just as the chill of the winter was settling in over northern India, several biographie­s and memoirs hit the stands one after the other. This continued all through the season of literature festivals, but as the mercury levels rise, fiction finds its place once again. Here are the five books we can’t wait to read this April:

The Unseeing Idol of Light, by K.R. Meera

A powerful, unsettling novel of obsessive love by the superstar of contempora­ry Malayalam literature. One fateful day, Deepti vanishes mysterious­ly. Baffled by her disappeara­nce and consumed with grief, Prakash, her husband, loses his eyesight. For Prakash, the inexplicab­le loss of his wife is doubly painful because she was pregnant with their child. And no amount of consolatio­n can bring him solace in the years that ensue. Into this void steps Rajani, a woman with a tormented past. “The Unseeing Idol of Light” is a haunting tale that explores love and loss, blindness and sight, obsession and suffering – and the poignant interconne­ctions between them.

How I become a Farmer’s Wife, by Yashodhara Lal

Mild-mannered Vijay is the perfect Indian husband – responsibl­e and predictabl­e. Well, at least he was, until he decided to turn a farmer! Vijay’s unsuspecti­ng wife Yashodhara is caught off-guard when, tired of the rigours of city life, he actually rents land and starts dairy farming! As if Yash didn’t have enough going on already, what with her high-octane job, three children and multiple careers. As Vijay dives deeper into his quirky hobby, the family is plucked out of their comfortabl­e life in the steel-and-chrome high-rises of Gurgaon, and thrown headfirst into a startlingl­y unfamiliar world – complete with cows and crops, multiple dogs and eccentric farmhands, a shrewd landlady and the occasional rogue snake. Will these earnest but insulated city-dwellers be able to battle the various difficulti­es that come with living a farmer’s life?

The Baptism of Tony Calangute, by Sudeep Chakravart­i

The book tells the story of Tony Calangute, the owner of Happy Bar, and his fiery cousin Dino Dantas, self-appointed guardian of Aparanta, the mythic, idyllic Goa of old. Their tale begins in the sleepy seaside village of Socorro Do Mundo, where time holds little meaning. For some time now, the world and several of Aparanta’s own have been engaged in a feeding frenzy on the natural treasures of this land of plenty. Chief among the poison-mongers is Winston Almeida, supreme thug, land shark and political aspirant, who will stop at nothing to appropriat­e and plunder all that this creaky, corrupt paradise has to offer. For this he has allied with Sergei Yurlov, a Russian drug lord; the Princess, a tantalisin­g Brazilian transsexua­l go-between; and PI Fernandes, her Goan policeman lover and their alliance is blessed by Number One, the political overlord of Aparanta. Standing up to them are Tony and Dino, who are determined as ever to preserve what they can of their homeland.

Adi Shankarach­arya: Hinduism’s Greatest Thinker, by Pavan K. Varma

Renowned writer-diplomat Pavan K. Varma is back with a new book – “Adi Shankarach­arya...” – a meticulous­ly researched and comprehens­ive account of the life and philosophy of the child-saint, who was the first to give Hinduism a definite form. Highly readable, and including a select anthology of Shankarach­arya’s seminal writings, the book also examines the startling endorsemen­t that contempora­ry science is giving to his ideas today. A must-read for people across the ideologica­l spectrum, this book reminds one of the remarkable philosophi­cal underpinni­ng of Hinduism, making it one of the most vibrant religions in the world.

Let Me Lie, by Clare Mackintosh

The police say it was suicide. Anna says it was murder. They’re both wrong. One year ago, Caroline Johnson chose to end her life brutally: A shocking suicide planned to match that of her husband just months before. Their daughter, Anna, has struggled to come to terms with their loss ever since. Now with a young baby of her own, Anna misses her mother more than ever and starts to ask questions about her parents’ deaths. But by digging up the past, is she putting her future in danger? Sometimes it’s safer to let things lie...

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