Book Review: Fiction / A silent warning against the modern life
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Book Review: Fiction / Of faith, desire, and the threshold between
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Book Review: Fiction / When ‘Little Women’ turns to murder: Katie Bernet reimagines a classic
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Book review: Fiction / Satgaon as memory: Reading ‘Satgaoner Haoatantira’
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Fiction review
Book Review: Fiction / ‘Chaashabhushar Sontan’: A quest for many questions and answers
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Fiction review
Book Review: Fiction / Agency, identity, and the rewriting of Medusa
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Fiction review
Book review: Fiction / Aruna Chakravarti’s ghosts don’t just scare, they remember
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BOOK REVIEW: FICTION / A wintry account of the human experience
2 April 2026, 00:00 AM
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BOOK REVIEW: FICTION / Stories from under the waves
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BOOK REVIEW: FICTION / An unintentional gatecrasher
25 February 2026, 16:24 PM
Reviews
A tale of survival, dominance, and self-discovery in colonial Bengal
Obayed Haq’s Bangla novel, Arkathi, is almost a bildungsroman tale filled with adventure and self-reflection. In true bildungsroman fashion, where the protagonist progresses into adulthood with room for growth and change, a bulk of Haq’s novel talks about the spiritual journey that an orphan, Naren, takes through a forest in order to mature, and comes out on the other side to realise a community’s deep, hidden truth.
12 December 2024, 18:00 PM
‘86 – Eighty Six’: How the light novel series depicts the humanity of dehumanised children
These nuanced characterisations of those who have suffered terribly and are desperately trying to rebuild themselves are what have kept me hooked to the series.
9 November 2024, 13:21 PM
Sad men behaving badly
In January 2023, I was sitting in the crowd, listening in on a panel at the 10th and possibly the final edition of the Dhaka Lit Fest. Sheikh Hasina had already been in power for almost 15 years, and it felt like the sun would never set on Awami League, at least not in my lifetime.
6 November 2024, 18:00 PM
For the ‘Twilight’ fan who grew up
I was a Twilight girl.
30 October 2024, 18:00 PM
A tale of forgetting and remembrance
Being an ardent admirer of K-pop culture, I wonder why I was hitherto unaware of this gem of a book, One Left by Kim Soom, and the excruciatingly painful truth it delineates.
23 October 2024, 18:00 PM
Of dewdrops and grit
‘Shabnam’ is a dewdrop in Persian. Shabnam (1960) is the name of Syed Mujtaba Ali’s passionate love story that stretches beyond the history of nearly a century ago.
23 October 2024, 18:00 PM
‘Huckleberry Finn’ through the eyes of Jim
Everett’s breezy, fast-moving retelling of Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (1884) is about putting in some due respect.
16 October 2024, 18:00 PM
Han Kang’s Nobel Prize win could not have come at a more significant time
As of writing this article, the official death count in the Palestinian genocide has surpassed 42 thousand lives. In my room, I quietly sit and read excerpts from Han Kang’s The Vegetarian (Portobello Books, 2015) in celebration of her winning the Nobel Prize in Literature.
16 October 2024, 18:00 PM
Otherness and invisible identities
'The Hippo Girl and Other Stories' holds up a mirror to a society that judges and ridicules those that do not adhere to its shortsighted vision of a homogenised culture.
24 July 2024, 18:00 PM
It’s ‘Mean Girls’ meets ‘Heathers’ meets ‘The Craft’
The best part of this book is perhaps the fact that all the weird, bonkers cultish stuff just happens with no rhyme or reason to it.
4 May 2024, 13:48 PM
‘Shubeik Lubeik’, wishes, and the vulnerability of human beings
In Deena Mohamed’s Shubeik Lubeik (originally published in 2015 and translated in 2023 by Mohamed herself), wishes have not only drastically altered the fabric of daily life in Egypt, but the world at large.
27 March 2024, 18:00 PM