Review: When The Signal Turns Red
By Jayanand Ukey. Grade: B “When The Signal Turns Red” is the debut work of Mumbai based IT professional, Jayanad Ukey. For a first book, the author has done a fairly good job keeping things simple...
View ArticleReview: Seven Days Without You
By Anmol Rana. Grade: B Seven Days Without You is the debut romance novel of Anmol Rana, one of the members of the ‘IT’ crowds in the young Indian authors community. Seven Days Without You is a story...
View ArticleReview: Hiccups
By Harsh Pande. Grade A+ I always read the little detail about the author provided in the book before I embark upon my reading journey. It kinds of gives me an idea about the psyche of the author,...
View ArticleReview: She Was My Girlfriend…Or I Thought So
By Prakash Shekle and Deovart Verma. Grade C. A few chapters into the book, and I went: “Oh God, not again!” Several new and young writers have impressed me with their fresh story-telling skills, even...
View ArticleReview: The Dream Chasers
By Vipul Mittra. Grade C Six Friends. Six Dreams. One Gang. Six friends at university are pursuing the coveted MBA. Viraat, Sandy, Karan, Mallika, Vandana, and Preeto are a gang who hang out together...
View ArticleReview: Aisle Be Damned
By Rishi Piparaiya. Grade A When I first saw the book cover of Aisle be Damned on Jaico’s upcoming list of publications, I knew I had to read this one. Call it the man-syndrome and blame the genetic...
View ArticleReview: It Started With A Friend Request
By Sudeep Nagarkar. Grade B. The very aesthetically designed cover, despite the sparkle overload, comes across as very pleasing to the target market: that is, outgoing, smart women in their teens and...
View ArticleReview: Life’s Like That
By Prashant Shrivastava. Grade D. ‘Life’s Like That’ is set in the beautiful city of Udaipur. However, is that enough to salvage a story that hardly cares to have a meaningful plot? The cover is neat,...
View ArticleReview: The Karachi Deception
By Shatrujeet Nath. Grade: A+ TKD is one of the riskier moves put forward by an Indian author, metaphorically hanging on the ledge. It could have swung towards being overly clichéd, boringly patriotic...
View ArticleReview: The Storm in My Mind…
By Ayaan Basu. Grade D The saying “do not judge a book by its cover” holds true for this book. And no, I’m not saying that in a positive way. When I read the title and the blurb, I thought I was in for...
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