

A grassroots leader who claims to be representing the interests of the socially disadvantaged vaults into power, at the head of a sweeping political movement. Leila is set in the not too distant future, when the social fracturing and economic inequality in Indian society leads to a nation divided into cloisters based on linguistic and caste identity. Misled by GPS, SUV plunges into Hawaii harbour.My copy as delivered by This is a review of the Book by Prayaag Akbar, and NOT the Netflix series.


Now jailed alongside Amritpal, how eight men were drawn into his orbit.Kevin Costner and wife of nearly 19 years to divorce.Alia Bhatt mistaken for Aishwarya Rai by New York paparazzi at Met Gala, internet calls it revenge for ‘Jhandeya and Tommy’.Sensex falls over 250 pts, Nifty at 18,067 IndiGo jumps 6% on Go First insolvency news.Ranveer Singh gets starstruck as he meets Arsenal legends Patrick Vieira, Cesc Fabregas reveals how he fell in love with the sport.Scientific temper, secularism among key parameters of Kerala’s new higher education ranking system.LSG vs CSK tip-off XI: Rahul and Unadkat to miss out, Wood likely to play, Santner comes in for Theekshana.‘Sometimes I couldn’t believe it’: Cesc Fabregas rips apart Chelsea for their tactical and technical mistakes vs Arsenal.The reason being, an extra-terrestrial race of reptiloids have not only arrived on Earth but are also intending to turn technology against us, threatening the very existence of humanity. In Khan’s novel, ISI and RAW not only come together but collectively agree that keeping a check on the borders of Pakistan and India might not be their most compelling problem. Price: ₹407 Aliens in Delhi by Sami Ahmad Khan In Khan’s novel, ISI and RAW come together. Set in a fictitious Indian city called Khaufpur, the novel’s protagonist is a boy, born days before the horrific tragedy and owing to his way of walking on all fours, earning the epithet of an animal. One of them being the Bhopal Gas Tragedy. Sinha’s novel that was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 2007 and won the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize: Best Book From Europe & South Asia in 2008 challenges one of the basic accepted tenets of dystopian fiction: whether a story needs to be set in the future to qualify as disturbing, considering enough horrific incidents have their roots in the present already. Animal’s People by Indra Sinha Sinha’s novel was shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize in 2007.
