Book Reviews

Quakers, Muslims, Muslim Quakers, and Quaker Muslims

Professor Eleanor Nesbitt’s book, Quaker Quicks — Open to New Light (published by Christian Alternative Books) provides an accessible and deeply informed account of Quakers engaged in interfaith activity over the last three and a half centuries. The following chapter (Chapter 4), which Professor Nesbitt has kindly allowed us to include at this site in […]

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Final Spread Gita Mani Rao

Dr Mani Rao on “The Gita & Its Translation – Reclaiming the resonance of the original via modern poetics”

Since the first translation of the Bhagavad Gita in 1789 by Charles Wilkins, there have been hundreds of translations into English. Some have translated the poetry of the Gita into prose, and some others have attempted metrical poetry. Whereas prose translations do not convey the delights of the original, good metrical translations have no choice

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Michelle’s Goa, a story told bluntly – a review by Frederick Noronha

Michelle Mendonca Bambawale’s just-published book ‘Becoming Goan’ (Ebury-Penguin, 2023) is a story told at three levels. First, it is the story of a return to Goa by a daughter of the soil whose family has been out for generations. Secondly, it tells you about the rapid (sometimes destructive) changes Goa has been going through, as

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Vinod Busjeet, Silent Winds, Dry Seas (New York: Doubleday, 2021), 288 pp

Author(s): Michael Mitchell Publication date Pub: 22 December 2022 Journal: Journal of Indentureship and Its Legacies Publisher: Pluto Journals Though much has been made of the fact that Silent Winds, Dry Seas is the first Anglophone novel from Mauritius to have achieved wide circulation, readers of Caribbean fiction will be struck by an impression of familiarity. The reason is not hard to

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Sukrita’s Salt and Pepper: A Paean to the Power of Language and Silence-Review by Girija Sharma

Salt & Pepper. Selected Poems. Sukrita. Paperwall Publishing. April 2023. 196 pages. The latest anthology of Sukrita’s poems Salt and Pepper traverses the poet’s momentous journey of nearly four decades. The poems bring us to a world not altogether unfamiliar— but a world imbued with a sensibility that is fine, complex and aesthetically profound at

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Ushinor Majumdar’s ‘India’s Secret War’: BSF’s exploits in the run-up to 1971 war

AUTHOR: Sujan Dutta Professor Ali. Captain Ali. Whatever the name, the man was the same. Parimal Kumar Ghosh. He died in the national capital recently (July 6). He was 84 years old and was ailing. In his death, he has given life to Ushinor Majumdar’s just published book. The life of the book is not

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“Carpenters and Kings” by Siddhartha Sarma; and “The Churches of India” by Joanne Taylor; reviewed by Vivek Menezes

Siddhartha Sarma’s Carpenters and Kings and Joanne Taylor’s The Churches of India outline an Indian Christian landscape as rooted as any other aspect of subcontinental heritage. Amidst India’s ongoing telescoping of political power into unprecedented dominance for the BJP of Amit Shah and Narendra Modi, some of the most intriguing subplots involve parts of the

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