Tag: fiction

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What The Eyes See by Nitya Ravi

What The Eyes See by Nitya Ravi is a fascinating and sometimes disturbing collection of seven short stories. Across these stories runs a theme of dark human nature and it's consequences.

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.

The Notebook by Nicholas Sparks

The Notebook by Nicholas Sparks will make you fall even more in love with love stories. If you are not a fan of romance stories then The Notebook by Nicholas Sparks is definitely what you need.

The God Of Small Things by Arundhati Roy

Arundhati Roy brings us her masterful first novel The God of Small Things which won the Man Booker Prize in 1997. A powerful novel filled with luscious prose and a heart rending story, Roy reveals to her readers an India hanging onto to the traditions of the past with a slight glimpse of her future.

Life of Pi by Yann Martel

Life of Pi serves a great lesson – to have faith in the toughest of times. You may not be a religious person, but I recommend Yann Martel’s Life of Pi, he does an exceptional job of carrying the theme through to the reader.

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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.

Happy Ending by Chloe Liese

Happy Ending by Chloe Liese follows Thea, a Pittsburgh bookseller, and Alex, a celebrity chef, who fake an old friendship in front of their newly paired exes and accidentally build a real one. Two years later, a forced beach vacation makes them face what they have been hiding. A grown-up rom-com about healing after divorce.

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