Cleopatra was not the exotic, scheming, and lustful queen of legend who ensnared Rome’s greatest men. Her affairs with Pompey, Caesar, and Antony were historic realities, but these were driven by realpolitik. As Adrian Goldsworthy writes: Cleopatra was not another Helen of Troy, a mythical figure about whom the most important thing was her beauty. … Continue reading Antony and Cleopatra
Category: Books
Roy’s Memoir
In the early aughts, when I was in college, Roy’s long-form essays were a frequent feature in the Outlook magazine. Vinod Mehta’s trust in her made her a household name, and he, too, fondly wrote about this association in his memoir. Sometime in 2015, her introduction to Navayana's edition of Ambedkar's 'Annihilation of Caste' again … Continue reading Roy’s Memoir
A Discussion on the Northeast
Last evening, I attended the book launch of the Shillong-based journalist Patricia Mukhim’s ‘From Isolation to Integration: Navigating the Geopolitics of India's Northeast (1990-2023)'. (Her daughter is also my colleague at UNDP). The launch included a discussion on the Northeast by a stellar panel – Vrinda Grover, Shyam Saran, GK Pillai, Shekhar Gupta, and Tiplut … Continue reading A Discussion on the Northeast
Some Dino Facts
Steve Brusatte’s “The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs: A New History of a Lost World” was a quick and engaging read about the fascinating field of palaeontology, and, of course, dinosaurs. A new species of dinosaur is currently being discovered, on average, once a week. (I took time to wrap my head around this … Continue reading Some Dino Facts
Julius Caesar
Even as a child, when I knew nothing of Roman history, Caesar’s assassination and his famous ‘Et tu Brute’ dialogue were familiar to me. Looking back, I wonder if Caesar’s enduring influence in popular culture is all thanks to Shakespeare. What if the play was never written and the assassination never dramatized? Would he have … Continue reading Julius Caesar
Szalay’s ‘Flesh’
I read David Szalay’s ‘Turbulence’ a few years back and loved it. It was a series of interconnected stories of characters that encounter each other on random flights (or something like that). This year, when Szalay again made it to the Booker shortlist, I decided to pick him up. ‘Flesh’ has its flaws but Szalay … Continue reading Szalay’s ‘Flesh’
The Columbian Exchange and the Dawn of the Homogenocene
When Columbus reached the Americas in 1492, the ecosystems of the Western and Eastern hemispheres had remained isolated for millennia and were strikingly different. His voyage set in motion what has come to be known as the Columbian Exchange, a vast transfer of plants, animals, people, and diseases between the Old and New Worlds. This … Continue reading The Columbian Exchange and the Dawn of the Homogenocene
Hamlet
I re-read Hamlet after 15 years. Now, with some additional accumulated wisdom, I was able to see glimpses of why this is considered to be Shakespeare’s magnum opus. When Achilles slaughters Hector, he is consumed by vengeance and glory. Divine punishment or suffering in the afterlife had little meaning for him. The Homeric Greek heroes … Continue reading Hamlet
Discovering Divya Prakash Dubey
Last month, a professor-friend invited me to a storytelling session by a Hindi author. My immediate response was a firm no. First, the session was in Hindi—a language whose literary world I’m largely unfamiliar with. Second, I hadn’t even heard of the author, someone named Divya Prakash Dubey. But, on the day of the event, … Continue reading Discovering Divya Prakash Dubey
Much Ado About Nothing
“Two unlikely foes end up in love, and all ends well, after the hero, who is treacherously made to assume that his fiancée is unfaithful, repents when the culprits are caught.” This can be a one-line summary of Shakespeare’s ‘Much Ado About Nothing’. I could easily think of so many Bollywood movies around this plot. … Continue reading Much Ado About Nothing









