Tag: Author Interview

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Ameya Bondre | An Interview with the Author of Afsaane

Ameya Bondre is a physician and public health researcher, working with a healthcare technology start-up associated with IIT-Bombay. Born and raised in Mumbai, he studied at KEM Hospital, and later at Johns Hopkins University in the United States.

Jayanthi Sankar

Jayanthi Sankar, the author of Dangling Gandhi, born and brought up in India, has been creatively active since 1995. She’s been published in several magazines and ezines like the indianruminations, museindia,

Juhi Ray

Juhi Ray pursued a career in the medical world. Her literary aspirations dwindled.  Every year, her top three New Year's resolutions would include "write more regularly".

Author Interview: Pulkit Sharma

Born in 1982, Pulkit Sharma is a renowned clinical psychologist, spiritual counsellor and the author of the book When The Soul Heals — Explorations In Spiritual Psychology. He integrates the richness of ancient spiritual perspectives and contemporary psychology helping people reclaim their lives.

Arjun Gupta

Arjun Gupta is an author and a mental health proponent. He is a survivor of severe clinical depression. In 2017, he started writing a blog to sensitize people about mental illness and suicide prevention.

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Molka by Monika Kim

Blood Bound by Ellis Hunter

Blood Bound by Ellis Hunter is the debut high-stakes fantasy about a witch princess and a dragon heir trapped in a centuries-old duel. Honest praise, fair critique, and similar reads inside.

We Burned So Bright by T.J. Klune

In We Burned So Bright by T.J. Klune, Don and Rodney drive west across a dying America to keep one last promise. A quieter, sadder Klune novel about parenting, grief, queer love, and whether your best is ever enough.

King of Gluttony by Ana Huang

Ana Huang's sixth Kings of Sin book gives Sebastian Laurent and Maya Singh the rivals-to-lovers stage they have been waiting for. A forced collaboration, sharp banter, lush food writing, and a careful slow burn make King of Gluttony a satisfying read, even if a familiar third-act beat and a saggy middle keep it from full marks.

Monsters in the Archives – My Year of Fear with Stephen King by Caroline Bicks

Caroline Bicks reads Stephen King's private archive the way a scholar reads a Shakespeare quarto. A warm, sometimes uneven hybrid of memoir, criticism, and biography that finds King's horror in his quietest editorial choices. Honest review with comparable reads.

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