Episódios
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In this Bookstop episode, Suneetha Balakrishnan introduces you to Indian English writer Anita Desai. Anita Desai was a well-known figure in the field of Indian English writing before Salman Rushdie and Arundhati Rai. The wonderful literary works of author Anita Desai take readers on unforgettable journeys. Her writing has received three Booker Prize nominations.
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In this episode of Book Stop, Suneetha Balakrishnan talks about one of the most prestigious awards in the world, the Nobel Prize. Each year, a year of preparation goes into selecting the Nobel laureates. But is the procedure as transparent, open, and well-maintained as we believe? Suneetha Balakrishnan talks about how the Nobel Prize is given to wrong people sometimes due to Judjes prejudistic mind and some other factors.
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Suneetha Balakrishnan discusses some of the well-known diaries in in this episode of Bookstop. Writers' diaries are arguably the most popular. This list includes several notable people including Frida Kahlo, Helen Keller, Virginia Woolf, and Sylvia Plath. There are hundreds of diaries available everywhere that were written during times of crisis and conflict in the world. These notes enable us to learn about and experience the pain that a great number of people endured. There are, however, diaries that were written with no intention of being published and went on to become famous worldwide. In their diaries, girls, such as Anne Frank and Helene Berr, used to write about their goals and hopes. But agony and fear were all that remained after that. Many had to leave the dairy and the world soon after. However, these journals now serve as a mirror of history.
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This week on Book Stop, Suneetha Balakrishnan discusses Gabriel García Márquez, the renowned novelist, and his most recent book, "Until August.". His last novel was published a decade after Márquez's death. After Márquez's death in 2014, multiple drafts, notes, and chapters of the last novel he attempted to write were kept in his archives at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin.
It was from there that his kids discovered 'until August', and they decided to publish it. He finished this book in his last years, struggling with words and letters as his memory gradually faded. He wrote at least five drafts of it himself. He made multiple edits and rewrites. Ultimately, he decided never to publish it. But nevertheless, his children released this work in spite of Marquez's decision.
However, there was a wave of both expectation and criticism over "until August" in the literary world. People who love Márquez, including Salman Rushdie, are deeply concerned about the book. And why is that?
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Suneetha Balakrishnan introduces several not-so-celebrated people in the literary world in this episode of Book Stop. You might think it is about some writers who received little or no attention. but here it is about some women who were the wives of world-famous writers.
Some of them invested everything they had in their husband's career. while some couldn't Grow their careers because all they had were miseries and struggles. but they Kept supporting Their husbands by whatever means they had. Some of them had sadder tales to tell. Some ended up giving all their ideas and abilities to their husbands, even after they had the power to dominate the literary world. Want to know more about it?
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This time at Bookstop, Sunitha Balakrishnan introduces you to renowned Russian author Andrei Platonov. Andrei Platonov is Regarded as one of the finest writers of the 20th century. The outside world did not start to hear about him or discuss him until the 1990s. In Soviet Russia, his art was banned. His writings were tightly suppressed even though he was a committed communist. Despite receiving fame in Russia, he died without publishing any of his most notable works. At the age of fifty-one, he passed away. What did he write specifically to rile up the Soviet leadership?
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The Prophet, a well-known work by Lebanese-American poet and author Kahlil Gibran, is being introduced by Suneetha Balakrishnan in this episode of BookStop. It is Gibran's most well-known composition. The Prophet is one of the most translated and best-selling books of all time, having been translated into over 116 languages. Printing of it has never stopped.
The Prophet was written a century ago. Kahlil Gibran authored The Prophet in 1923; it was first published in Arabic and then in English. According to Mary Haskell, a friend of Gibran's, it is the most loving book ever written and will be embraced as the necessary guidance for future generations. What kind of strength did the prophet Khalil Gibran possess?
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In this episode of BookStop, Suneetha Balakrishnan discusses the advancements that happened in the writing industry in 2023. This year will be remembered as significant in the literary world, regardless of any literary awards or the ascent or decline of literary personalities.
A significant problem that will impact the literary world was acknowledged in 2023, and it sparked talks, writings, strikes, and legal disputes against it.
Artificial intelligence is that problem. Silicon Valley, Hollywood, and the Authors Guild were all frightened upon discovering the threat. How was this catastrophe received by the literary community?
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Suneetha Balakrishnan introduces you to five well-known Indian dystopian books in the most recent episode of "Bookstop." A dystopian society is a terrifying and degrading imaginary community. An idealized state or location where everything is as horrible as it can get.
Numerous books explore the idea of a dystopian society. The five books we learn about in this episode are Animal's People, Half of What I Say, The Black Dwarves of the Good Little Bay, Leila, and Escape.
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You are introduced to two Iraqi bloggers, by Suneetha Balakrishnan in the most recent episode of "Bookstop." Salam Pax and Riverbend. These two people used to blog about the real horrors of the 2003 American invasion of Iraq , under fake names. Through this blog, the world comes to know what's happening to the common people of Iraq and how much they suffer. Even if these blogs were there for more than five years, people still don't know their real names or their whereabouts. Furthermore, these two individuals never posted once the invasion was over.
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in this episode of bookstop, suneetha balakrishnam introduces you to Agatha Christie, the queen of crime novels. she is one of the best-selling novelist of all time with her 66 detective novels and 14 short story collections, as well as the world’s longest-running play – The Mousetrap.
However, the greatest mystery in all of Agatha Christie's works was in her own life. She mysteriously vanished for 11 days, sparking numerous stories, articles, and films about it. and it still remains as a mystery.
Learn more about the life and works of Agatha Christie.
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This edition of Book Stop features Shashi Deshpande's memoir, "Listen to Me." Within its pages, readers can explore the literary and cultural evolution of Indian English literature from the 1980s onwards, with a particular focus on the insights and experiences of women writers during that era. In "Listen to Me," Shashi Deshpande shares her personal journey, offering readers a glimpse into the world she has traversed and imparting the wisdom and knowledge she has gained. In this podcast, author and prominent English translator Sunitha Balakrishnan will engage in a discussion about memoirs that encapsulate the essence of their respective eras
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In this episode of Book Stop, Suneetha Balakrishnan introduces you to the very famous writer of the twentieth century, Daphne du Maurier, and her most successful work, Rebecca. Interestingly, Rebbeca, which was published in 1938, was not at first taken seriously by critics. Most people wrote about it as an average romance novel. but later Rebecca ended up being the best-selling novel of the past 85 years. A classic novel that has never gone out of print. How did Rebecca, at first known as a romance novel, become a notable psychological thriller?
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The rise and fall of Enid Blyton who is known as the Empress of Children's literature is an interesting episode in world literature. In the latest episode of Book Stop, Suneetha Balakrishnan speaks about why her works became controversial, the reason behind BBC refusing to broadcast her stoies and more
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Mohammed Moulessehoul is an Algerian novelist, who has explored the Civil Wars in Arab countries in a different way. Why had he taken shelter under a pseudonym Yasmina Khadra for several years? How and when has he decided to reveal his identity? And why the French media described him as a man with blood stained hands? Suneetha Balakrishnan talks about all these and more on Yasmina khadra in the latest episode of Book Stop
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Susan Abulhawa's parents became refugees following the 1967 Six Day War. Decades later, she returned to Palestine and started an organization called Playgrounds for Palestine for the victim children of political conflict. Susan started writing with political goals to expose the plight of Palestine to the world. In the latest episode of Book Stop podcast, Suneetha Balakrishnan discusses the life and works of Susan Abulhawa
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What will be the five things that haunt those who are on their dying beds? Top five by The Top Five Regrets of the Dying discusses the learnings she had acquired from those who had been dying. There was a time when top five The Top Five Regrets of the Dying struggled to get a publisher, says Suneetha Balakrishnan in the latest episode of book stop podcast
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Domenico Starnone is one among the best Italian writers of our times. His novel 'The House on Via Gemito' won the prestigious Premio Strega Prize in 2001. The latest episode of Bookstop podcast by Suneetha Balakrishan discusses the literary life of Domenico Starnone and the evolution Premito Strega Prize.
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shahidul zahir is known as the Marquez of Bangladesh. Like Marquez, he is an exponent of magical realism in literature. His masterpiece is the novel 'Life and Political Reality', based on the Bangladesh liberation struggle of 1971. In this episode of Book Stop, Suneetha Balakrishnan discusses the works of shahidul zahir
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In this episode of Bookstop, Suneetha Balakrishnan talks about the first booker prize winner P H Newby, his literary life, his connection to the BBC, and the booker winning book - Something To Answer For.
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