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India Booked
India Booked
Author: ThePodium.in
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Description
India Booked is a podcast that uses literature as a lever to bring multiple
facets of India alive. A perfect podcast for bibliophiles, trivia junkies and
people interested in learning more about India. Every episode focuses on a
different theme and takes place via a conversation between the host with
celebrated authors.
facets of India alive. A perfect podcast for bibliophiles, trivia junkies and
people interested in learning more about India. Every episode focuses on a
different theme and takes place via a conversation between the host with
celebrated authors.
31 Episodes
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India Booked Trailer
In the first episode, India Booked talks to Manimugdha Sharma, News Editor and
author of Allahu Akbar: Understanding the Great Mughal in Today's India. Listen
to discover about mughals, akbars, nationalism and how bollywood gets Akbar
wrong.
Manimugdha Sharma is a quizzer, a journalist, and holds an interest and
education in history. In Allahu Akbar, he combines his love and knowledge of the
past, to give us an interesting oral account of what Akbar represents in today's
times. We discuss Akbar's ruthless achievements in warfare, his political
savviness and how media agenda setting and the (mis)representation of matters
has not changed through times. We also touch upon the subject of secularism and
discuss if Akbar was the statesman he's made to be and ask the pertinent
question: should the present be judged by the yardstick of the past? Listen in
to find out!
In the second episode, travel through a Christian village in Meghalaya, meet
the Kolkata-based Jewish community and feast on the 56-course feast at Jagannath
as India Booked talks to Varud Gupta, author of the cookbook-cum-travelouge
Bhagwaan Ke Pakwaan. Listen to discover what he has to share on the connections
between faith and food in the communities of India and how they are trying to
preserve their culinary cultures.
Varud Gupta is an NYU graduate in Finance. He has also penned Chhotu, a
coming-of-age graphic novel set against the Partition. Bhagwaan ke Pakwaan,
which loosely translates to Food of the Gods, captures stories of what different
cultures have to offer around their famous recipes. Listen now to find out how
food, faith, and community are interwoven in India and how the stories came
together in the book.
Invisible Man, the seminal work (controversies and shortcomings included)
talking about the Indian transmasculine network, is an important work for
bringing the community's voice to the fore. In this episode of India Booked,
Ayushi speaks to author Nandini Krishnan on how the book came to be, what the
interview process looked like, how India's socio-religio-political realities
play out within the network, the friction that the book caused after being
released, and much, much more. Tune in now!
Bad Money, the latest book of Vivek Kaul is an important title for the way its
author discloses the history of the Indian Economy and Banking system we never
knew about, and discusses why it is important to be aware of where your money
goes.
In this episode of India Booked, Ayushi Mona discusses with him what constitutes
bad money, what the transition has been like from the banking systems in the
past to the current ones, and how important is it to know where your money is
safe and unsafe. In this episode, he also unfolds how bad money affects the
economy, layer by layer and shares with the listeners his recommendations on
books related to economy and other structures. Tune in!
In Truck De India!, journalist Rajat Ubhaykar embarks on a 10,000 km-long, 100%
unplanned trip, hitchhiking with truckers all across India. On the way, he makes
unexpected friendships; listens to highway ghost stories; discovers the
near-fatal consequences of overloading trucks; documents the fascinating
tradition of truck art in Punjab; travels alongside nomadic shepherds in
Kashmir; encounters endemic corruption repeatedly; survives NH39, the
insurgent-ridden highway through Nagaland and Manipur; and is unfailingly
greeted by the unconditional kindness of perfect strangers.
Imbued with humour, empathy, and a keen sense of history, Truck De India! is a
travelogue like no other you've read. It is the story of India, and Indians, on
the road.
Listen to Rajat Ubhaykar in the fifth episode and take a journey. Horn Ok Please
In Bulletproof, journalist and author Teresa Rehman goes beyond statistics and
looks at documentary evidences, and shows us how conflict impacts women,
children, health etc. A first-of-its-kind account, Bulletproof is the story of a
female combat journalist and her encounters with insurgency from north-east
India.
In this episode of India Booked, Rehman speaks to Ayushi Mona about her
experiences of being a journalist and author, and also shares the story behind
the title of the book, how challenging and eventually traumatic it is to report
in some of the most under-reported regions without any support system, why it's
important to still do so, and much more. Listen now!
Essayist, short-story writer, and author of 'House of Nails', and 'Fire Girl',
Sayantani Dasgupta speaks to Ayushi Mona about her childhood experiences – from
being an avid-reader to enjoying the dynamics of Delhi, from getting emotional
to evolving as a person who places everything in contexts, from what moved her
about Delhi to books that you should read, and more. Tune in now.
"Fire Girl," is her debut collection of essays, where she examines her personal
story against the history, religion, popular culture and mythology of South Asia
and her current home in the American West.
In this eighth episode of India Booked, Ayushi Mona speaks to the stalwart
academic and writer Ruth Vanita.
They chat about her journey writing about the courtesans of India (in Dancing
with the Nation: Courtesans in Bombay Cinema and Memory of Light), what inspired
her to write about the courtesan culture, how Victorian morality changed the
ideas of pleasure in Indian society and made the "dominant attitude" as
anti-pleasure, her favourite cinematic depiction of courtesans, and much much
more.
Tune in now on the channel of your choice or the link in our bio.
*
Ruth Vanita is an Indian academic, activist and author who specialises in
British and Indian literary history with a focus on gender and sexuality
studies.
In episode 9 of India Booked, Ayushi Mona and bestselling author Vikram Chandra
discuss his non fiction debut, Mirrored Mind: My Life in Letters and Code.
The podcast expounds on the connections between the worlds of art and
technology. Is elegance the domain only of writers and artists? What about
Coders also obsessed with the same but how can we ascribe beauty to the craft of
writing code?
Listen to this podcast to explore varied topics discussed in the book such as
logic gates and literary modernism, the machismo of tech geeks, the omnipresence
of an "Indian Mafia" in Silicon Valley, and the writings of the eleventh-century
Kashmiri thinker Abhinavagupta,
This episode much like the book is engrossing, original, and heady book of
sweeping ideas.
In this episode of India Booked, host Ayushi Mona speaks to Vikramjit Singh
Rooprai, an educator, heritage activist and author. They discuss all thing
Indian heritage, especially 'Baolis', or stepwells, of and around Delhi.
Vikramjit shares the brilliance behind physics and other natural factors
involved in creation of a Baoli, and what really pushed him to write 'Delhi
Heritage: Top 10 Baolis' (published by Niyogi Books), the research involved, his
passion for Indian heritage sites, and much more. Tune in now!
A prolific translator, the Books Editor at Scroll.in, and professor of creative
writing and literary journalism; Arunava Sinha is one of India's most important
literary figures.
In this episode of India Booked, Ayushi Mona and Sinha discuss Bengali
literature and how he came to translation (part awareness, part accident, part
design), the city of Calcutta ("The theatre of the vast drama of human life" as
Sinha puts it) in the literary imagination of readers and writers both in
Bengali and English, how the city's literary, political, and sporting culture
has directly or indirectly influenced so many of our writers, the "shrinking of
our literary and artistic arcs" and much more.
Tune in now.
Bringing in the 12th episode of India Booked on a high note! Shantanu Datta, in
his 30-year-long journalism career, has interviewed such global icons as Roger
Waters (Pink Floyd), Ian Anderson and Martin Barre (Jethro Tull), Mark Knopfler
(Dire Straits), Usha Uthap, Dilip Balakrishnan, and several, several more. He
has written about it in the Speaking Tiger-published, Calling Elvis.
Host Ayushi Mona has an hour-long chat with Datta about this journey of seeing
the consumption of western music change in India, his own relationship with
music and musicians ("When I spoke to them, the names on vinyl records came
alive," says Datta), how music reporting has changed and how its increased
availability impacted how to write about it, his own introspection on what makes
their tunes timeless, K-pop, and much, much more!
As a bonus, hear tunes from Datta's own CD collection of Indian rock from the
80s!
#purplepencilproject #indiabooked #indianrock #rockstars #pinkfloyd #jethrotull
#direstraits #callingelvis #speakingtigerbooks
For centuries, Rajasthan has been a gold mine of oral traditions and histories,
with Padma Shri Vijaydan Detha being one of the foremost storytellers of all
time. His stories, collected from the common folk of Rajasthan, mark an
important intervention in 20th century Rajasthani literature.
Giving a new lease of life to his writings, Timeless Tales from Marwar is a
handpicked collection of folk tales from the everlasting works of Detha's
celebrated Batan ri Phulwari meaning 'Garden of Tales'. Collected and written
over the span of nearly fifty years, this fourteen-volume assortment of
Rajasthani folk stories earned him the moniker-the Shakespeare of Rajasthan.
On this episode of India Booked, Ayushi Mona talks to Vishes Kothari, a
financial consultant, native of Sadulpur in Rajasthan with a keen interest in
the oral and musical traditions of his state.
He has been associated with UNESCO-Sahapedia on projects focussed on the
musical traditions of women in Rajasthan, and as a language expert with the
Jaipur Virasat Foundation.
In the 14th episode of India Booked, author Anukrti Upadhyay takes us through
the deserts of Rajasthan and the hot springs of Japan through her novel
Kintsugi. In the same conversation, she connects contrasts betweenthe cultures
of Jaipur and Japan and creates a delightful echo, all of her own.
Anukrti Upadhyay is also the author of the twin novellas Daura and Bhaunri,
which have been commended for its independent characters and fresh narrative,
and a short story collection in Hindi called Japani Sarai, making her one of the
few bilingual writers in India.
Tune into this episode to hear her and host, Ayushi Mona discuss her inspiration
for writing and her thoughts on how books belong more to the readers than the
authors themselves. She paints a picture of the striking visual differences
in the aesthetics of Japan and India, calling both the cultures "perfect foils
to each other" and expresses how people, despite differences in cultures and
traditions, are not very different from each other after all.
Tune in for a descriptive treat of an excerpt from the novel Kintsugi by the
author herself, as she brings to life the people and the lanes of the Johri
Bazar of Jaipur.
'The 'Other' Shangri-La: Journeys through the Sino-Tibetan frontier in Sichuan'
is a narrative travelogue based on author Shivaji Das and his wife's journey
which explores the region's history and the lives and cultures of the people
inhabiting these remote lands in detail.
In this episode of India Booked, Shivaji Das and Yolanda Yu recount their
journey to Tibet as writers and more significantly as travellers, embellishing
it with quirky incidents and fascinating anecdotes.
The travel enthusiasts and companions share with Ayushi Mona the highlight of
their trip with surprisingly different approaches, one recounting how they got
entangled in the unfolding of a love triangle, while the other underlines the
realities of them travelling on rugged roads fraught with danger.
The podcast narrates the adventures of travelling into lands far away, the edge
of touring as a couple, the culture and habits of migration amongst the
Tibetans and the dangerous journeys they undertake that "make men out of boys",
as Shivaji puts it.
Tune in to hear them discuss elements of nature that are worth going back to and
draw parallels between the two diverse cultures of India and China. This
episode is for writers and travellers alike, as it explores the routines they
follow as writers and the thrills they experience as travellers on a journey!
Stoned, Shamed, Depressed' is an alarming reality check of the struggles faced
by the teens of India, dealing with the evident but deliberately denied issues
of substance abuse, social media and gaming, bullying, body shaming and the
frailty of mental health. Renowned journalist and author Jyotsna Mohan Bhargava
traces the difficult journey from teenage to adulthood, where children easily
give into temptations without realizing the repercussions and dangers of the
virtual world and bad habits.
In this episode of India Booked, Jyotsna talks to host Ayushi Mona about the eye
opening accounts that materialized the book and the incidents that confirm the
ignorance and denial of parents on the mental health issues and habits of their
children.
The conversation addresses the concerns of drugs, consent and self-harm, of how
children get caught up in the web of conforming to the expectations of their
family against the pressure from their peers and much more.
Tune in now to hear Jyotsna Mohan Bhargava dig beneath the charades of everyday
lives of the Indian teenager in both cyberspace and the modern-day school life
in urban India.
'Bhairavi- The Runaway', written by Shivani aka Gaura Pant, a pioneer of women's
fiction in India, is the story of a woman's life, her resilience, her moral and
mental strength, and about the restraints and choices women have in the society.
In this episode of India Booked, the translator of 'Bhairavi' and Chitra
Mudgal's 'Giligadu', Priyanka Sarkar talks to Ayushi Mona about her experience
translating the books, the scope and depth of women's literature, about bringing
alive a concept to an unaware audience and as she says, 'translating the
untranslatable'.
The discussion in this episode spans from the reactions women receive from the
society for writing bold books to the inclusion of glossaries in translations to
spirituality and sensuality in mythology and the aspect of humanizing the
characters in it. Priyanka takes us into the world of 'Bhairavi' through
significant excerpts from the book, both in Hindi and English, while pulling out
comparisons between them and explaining the nuances of translation. Tune in now!
'Twilight in a Knotted World' is the third novel by journalist and historian
Siddhartha Sarma that uncovers the many layers of the Phansigar problem and a
hierarchy of stranglers through the investigations of Captain William Henry
Sleeman, unearthing mysteries and bleak, uncomfortable truths about India.
In the 18th episode of India Booked, discussing the period of colonial India,
host Ayushi Mona and Author Siddhartha Sarma unravel the aspects of history and
the gaps that are filled by fictionalizing it.
The podcast delves into the reasons for bringing out the book and the solid
portrayal of major female characters in it, the construction of conversations
between them and the thoughts that went into vivifying the untold stance of the
characters in history.
Tune in now to discover the underlying facets of the colonial rule and a list of
historical fiction recommendations that will get you absolutely hooked into the
genre, if you aren't already!
Writer, literary translator, book critic and a literary podcast (Desi Books)
host herself, Jenny Bhatt speaks to Ayushi Mona how the themes of Dhumketu's
books resonated with the short stories of her own, prompting her to bring out
her debut literary translation, 'Ratno Dholi: The Best Stories of Dhumketu'.
In this hour-long episode on short stories and translations, Jenny describes,
through brilliant metaphors, how a short story differs from a novel and why it
is unfair to expect authors with different skillsets to master both, and about
the commercial pressures on writers in the publishing industry.
Recommending works by other luminaries in the field, Jenny talks about how
regional translations break stereotypes and create a better understanding of
diverse cultures, and touches upon the deficit representation of Indian
literature in school curriculums and of Gujarati literature being translated in
comparison to other regional languages. Tune in now!




