Booked in the second half
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Non-fiction was the belle of the literary ball last year, but judging
from the first half of 2012, fiction is rallying back this year. There
have already been some interesting titles, and the next few months look
good for bookworms. Here’s a look at ten books to put on your pre-order
list
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August
The Wildings, Nilanjana Roy, Aleph
Critic
and columnist Nilanjana Roy makes her debut as a novelist with this
story about cats in Nizamuddin. While this may make The Wildings sound
like the perfect novel for a lolcats fan, there’s nothing frivolous
about The Wildings. Instead there’s lots of menace and a cute kitten who
is, while being adorable, threatening the peace of mind of an entire
neighbourhood.
Ministry Of Hurt Sentiments, Altaf Tyrewala, Harper Collins
Altaf
Tyrewala’s novel was tentatively titled English and the one extract
(released a few months ago) was satirical, funny and alarmingly close to
the numerology-afflicted spelling that has become almost de rigeur
these days. Ministry of Hurt Sentiments supposedly “celebrates the
dystopia that is modern-day Mumbai”. Tyrewala certainly is the man for
the job.
September The Casual Vacancy, JK Rowling, Hachette
Can
JK Rowling make the petty world of English councils exciting? It
doesn’t really matter. Thanks to the massive following Rowling enjoys,
everyone will want a copy regardless of the plot. Will Rowling continue
that annoying habit of killing off characters, seen in action repeatedly
in Harry Potter, or will she reveal herself to be a modern-day Jane
Austen?
Sin Is A Puppy That Follows You Home, Balaraba Ramat Yakubu, Blaft
Chances
are you’ve never heard of the language Hausa, which, apparently, boasts
of a wealth of popular fiction inspired by Hindi films and Persian
epics. Balaraba Ramat Yakubu’s novel is the first Hausa novel to be
translated into English. It has been described as “an Islamic feminist
soap opera with some prostitutes and black magic”.
NW, Zadie Smith, Penguin
For
her second novel, Zadie Smith comes back to London and creates a
fictional council estate called Caldwell. Here, buildings are named
after philosophers and in them are archives documenting the lives the
philosophers lived. Considering Smith’s passionate advocacy of libraries
— many of which are under threat because of the British government’s
austerity measures — expect a poignant and
melancholic tale. Joseph Anton, Salman Rushdie, Random House
Ok,
so a memoir is not fiction but we’ve included Salman Rushdie’s Joseph
Anton simply because it is undoubtedly among the most anticipated books
of the year. Everyone wants to know about the most controversial South
Asian author in the world and his fatwa years. In case you were
wondering, Joseph Anton is the alias Rushdie coined, taking the first
names of his two favourite authors (Joseph Conrad and Anton Chekov) when
the British police asked him to come up with code name his security
team could use.
October Not Only Things That Have Happened, Mridula Koshy, Harper Collins
A
mother on her deathbed and a son muddling through an identity crisis
are on separate continents — these are the two protagonists of Koshy’s
first novel. Considering Koshy’s gift for emotionally-charged
descriptions, it may be wise to keep a box of tissues handy while
reading this one. November Sweet Tooth, Ian McEwan, Random House
Spies
and novelists meet in Ian McEwan’s newest novel. Set in 1972, Sweet
Tooth has as its heroine Serena Frome, daughter of a bishop, reader of
novels, an alumnus of Cambridge University and an MI5 recruit. Sweet
Tooth is the name of the secret mission she’s given, during which she
meets an upcoming novelist named Tom Haley and falls in love with him.
Does McEwan have a little bit of John Le Carre in him? All those who
think he may, this one’s for you.
December Mr Majestic: The Tout Of Bengaluru,Zac O’Yeah, Hachette
She’s
an unpleasant foreigner, he’s a small-time tout; the two of them are
thrown together when she needs to find her missing sister. Zac O’Yeah’s
Once Upon A Time In Scandinavistan, in which Scandinavia was a tropical
place and tandoori moose was the local delicacy, is good reason to
expect the crime fiction author’s new novel will make you see Bengaluru
in a new light.
The Last War, Sandipan Deb, Pan Macmillan
Hindu
epics are all the rage at the moment, but journalist Sandipan Deb has a
twist to add to his tale. The Last War is a retelling of the Mahabharat
set in Mumbai’s underworld, and spans five decades.
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