Six Indian authors in NYT 100 Notable Books of 2014


Washington, Dec 3 (IANS): Works of five Indian-American and one Indian author figure among 100 Notable Books of 2014 selected by the editors of The New York Times Book Review.

Delhi-born Indian-American author Akhil Sharma's novel "Family Life" figures in the Fiction & Poetry section. "Sharma's novel, deeply unnerving and tender at the core, charts a young man's struggles to grow within a family shattered by tragedy and disoriented by its move from India," Times said.

Books in nonfiction include "Being Mortal: Medicine and What Matters in the End" By Atul Gawande, an American surgeon, author, and public health researcher.

The book is described as "A meditation on living better with age-related frailty, serious illness and approaching death."

Indian historian and writer Ramachandra Guha makes it to the list with "Gandhi Before India."

The Times noted "It was as a young lawyer in South Africa that Gandhi forged the philosophy and strategies later put to such effect in India."

Indian-American writer Vikram Chandra, winner of 1996 Commonwealth Writers' Prize for Best First Book, is included for "Geek Sublime: The Beauty of Code, the Code of Beauty".

"With great subtlety and depth, Chandra, who is both a novelist and a programmer, traces the connections between art and technology," says the Times.

American author and journalist Anand Gopal's "No Good Men Among The Living: America, the Taliban, and the War Through Afghan Eyes" takes "A devastating look at how we got Afghanistan wrong."

In "The True American: Murder and Mercy in Texas" by American author and newspaper columnist Anand Giridharadas, "competing visions of the American dream collide in this account of a post-9/11 hate crime and its unlikely reverberations," according to the Times.

  

Top Stories


Leave a Comment

Title: Six Indian authors in NYT 100 Notable Books of 2014



You have 2000 characters left.

Disclaimer:

Please write your correct name and email address. Kindly do not post any personal, abusive, defamatory, infringing, obscene, indecent, discriminatory or unlawful or similar comments. Daijiworld.com will not be responsible for any defamatory message posted under this article.

Please note that sending false messages to insult, defame, intimidate, mislead or deceive people or to intentionally cause public disorder is punishable under law. It is obligatory on Daijiworld to provide the IP address and other details of senders of such comments, to the authority concerned upon request.

Hence, sending offensive comments using daijiworld will be purely at your own risk, and in no way will Daijiworld.com be held responsible.