Tag: Author Interview

Browse our exclusive articles!

Nitya Ravi

Nitya Ravi, the author of What The Eyes See, enjoys expressing herself through written words and loves reading and writing intriguing and dark stories.

Author Interview: Subhashini Prasad | The Author of Not Really Indian

Subhashini Prasad was born Indian, raised Indonesian, educated American and professionally groomed to call the world her oyster. She holds an MBA degree from the Indian School of Business and has over ten years of work experience in Strategy Consulting and Banking.

Debleena Majumdar | The Author of A Marketplace for Murder

Debleena Majumdar, the author of A Marketplace of Murder, grew in a home filled with books, music and stories. Her parents were teachers and books were the Gods they prayed to.

Rohit Sodha

Rohit Sodha, a corporate CEO by profession, educated from Harvard Business School and Indraprastha University; he did his schooling from Delhi Public School R...

Atul Jalan

Atul Jalan, A science storyteller and futurist, is the founder-CEO of a pioneering AI venture, Manthan, by day. It is his fourth successful venture as an entrepreneur, and there is no knowing where he might take us next.

Popular

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.

Subscribe

spot_imgspot_img