118 august 2019
Ruskin Bond, as always,
brings together in his
stories a bunch of di-
verse and quirky char-
acters. His fiction is
especially celebrated
for the unforgettable
misfits, dreamers,
small-time con artists,
rapscallions and drift-
ers who populate it.
A Gallery of Rascals
will bring together, for
the first time, the most
memorable rogues in
his stories. Look out
for the new tales to be
featured in this collec-
tion—‘A Man Called
Brain’, ‘Sher Singh and
the Hot-water Bottle’—
while enjoying old
favourites like ‘The
Thief ’s Story’, ‘The Boy
Who Broke the Bank’,
‘Tigers for Dinner’ and
‘A Case for Inspector
Lal’. Immensely read-
able, the 30 stories
in the collection will
show exactly what
makes Bond a master
storyteller.
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE ...Daastan-e-
Dastarkhan: Stories and Recipes from
Muslim Kitchens (Hachette): Mas-
terChef India contestant Sadaf Hus-
sain explores the stories and tra-
ditional cooking techniques of 30
dishes of Muslim communities in
India. With easy recipes adapted to
modern times, the book aims at al-
lowing people to recreate and sam-
ple these mouthwatering delicacies.
A Gallery of Rascals by Ruskin Bond,
Aleph Book Company
Scope Out
Who Killed Liberal
Islam(Rupa)
Hasan Suroor pro-
vides a nuanced
perspective on why
liberal Islam is under
threat in India.
Kafka’s Last Trial:
The Case of a
Literary Legacy
(Pan Macmillan India)
Writer Benjamin
Balint details how
literary executor Max
Brod preserved
Kafka’s legacy after
his death—and
against his own
wishes.
A Thousand Ships
(Pan Macmillan India)
Author Natalie
Haynes’ book retells
the story of the
Trojan War from
an all-female
perspective.
Books
Reader’s Digest
bo
ok
co
ve
rs
co
ur
te
sy
:^ a
le
ph
bo
ok
co
mp
an
y,^
ha
ch
et
te
in
di
a,
ru
pa
pu
bl
ica
tio
ns