Kanishka Gupta
@kan_writersside
ID: 87104687
03-11-2009 04:05:51
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Congratulations Atharva Pandit for making it to The JCB Prize for Literature longlist! Very proud, and rooting for you 🌹✨
“In Our City, That Year everyone turns to writing as a response. And in turn writing turns into its own kind of agony.” Another tour de force review from Vighnesh Hampapura and Shree Thaarshini Sriraman! scroll.in/article/107293…
On Our City That Year (Penguin India), a slow devastation from Geetanjali Shree and Daisy Rockwell ڈیزی راکویل डेज़ी राक्वैल. Wrote this essay with Shree Thaarshini, not knowing how else to respond, for Scroll.in. Thanks to Arunava Sinha and Sayari Debnath for the space to experiment. scroll.in/article/107293…
The Machine is Learning by Tanuj Solanki is excellent. Beautiful writing. If you like Shanta Gokhale or Devika Rege’s books, this is for you. Now starting this book I think I saw Krish Ashok mention in one of his tweets and bought.
In my humble opinion, A Speck of Coal Dust, set in the Dhanbad coalfields, is the best coming–of–age story by an Indian English novelist since Swami and Friends. I interviewed its author for #Likhawat on SansadTV HarperCollins Kanishka Gupta youtu.be/PCznYWj0vRQ?fe…
‘The book is a testament to what fine journalism promises to be – rich, complex, empowering the forgotten, and capable of capturing the zeitgeist.’ Priavi Joshi reviews my book ‘the Many Lives of Syeda X’ for the Scroll. scroll.in/article/107232…
Book review by Priavi Joshi. Please read when you can.
Finally, we have really learnt something about book marketing with our book #NimbuSaab . So, this is happening TODAY in Gurgaon, come? It will mean a lot to us. :) P.S - Nimbu paani and chocolate cake on the house. :) Gurmehar Kaur Neha Dwivedi HarperCollins MuseoCamera
every time I picked up ‘The Many Lives of Syeda X’ an important theme, a familiar pattern emerged — a rare richness of text that upon each reading, holds the potential to reveal new truths to us about ourselves. I review Neha Dixit’s gift of a book:
Congratulations to Atharva Pandit, @asiaspeaks 2021, on being long-listed for the JCB Literature Prize for his novel ‘Hurda’! 🎉📚
.Neha Dixit's book casts light on the lives of those who serve as the backbone of our economy and yet remain among the most marginalised and vulnerable groups in modern India – migrants, especially women urban migrants. scroll.in/article/107232… By Priavi Joshi
"As a translator and a poet himself, Hoskote is an excellent interlocutor of the giants of the past." Thank you, Aditya Mani Jha , for this richly nuanced response to my Mir book, The Homeland's an Ocean! And I'm especially happy that it appears in a review-essay that also
On this week's episode of Below the Radar, we're joined by Ranjit Hoskote, poet, translator, art critic, and curator✍🏻 Ranjit discusses Bombay’s political and cultural milieu in the 1980s and 90s, the promise of interstitial spaces, and more! Tune in at sfu.ca/vancity-office…
'Magadh' by Shrikanth Verma, translated by Arunava Sinha is now available! flipkart.com/s/RkVkzxNNNN #newtitle #readtranslations #jupress #publications