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The Chakkar - Indian Arts Review
Photo-Essay: The Frequencies of History
Apr 22, 2026
Photo-Essay: The Frequencies of History
Apr 22, 2026
Apr 22, 2026
The Sacred and the Starved
Apr 19, 2026
The Sacred and the Starved
Apr 19, 2026
Apr 19, 2026
‘The Heart Remembers’: Two Poems by Neera Kashyap
Apr 16, 2026
‘The Heart Remembers’: Two Poems by Neera Kashyap
Apr 16, 2026
Apr 16, 2026
A Completely Human AI-Generated Reading List for the Indian Summer
Literature, Satire The Chakkar 02/06/25 Literature, Satire The Chakkar 02/06/25

A Completely Human AI-Generated Reading List for the Indian Summer

Satire: The solution to AI mimicking humans is to have humans mimic the AI that mimics the human. From Vikram Chandra and Salman Rushdie to mythological adventures and a popcorny topsy-turvy romance, here is our preview of the 15 hottest and thoroughly fraudulent Indian books for the 2025 summer. By Karan Madhok

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“The more opposition I get, the more energy I get” – An Interview with Sudeep Chakravarty
Literature The Chakkar 12/05/25 Literature The Chakkar 12/05/25

“The more opposition I get, the more energy I get” – An Interview with Sudeep Chakravarty

Author and journalist Sudeep Chakravarty speaks about the stories that drive him, wandering across genres, and his Delhi-based latest work, Fallen City. By Amritesh Mukherjee

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The Revolution Will Be Commodified: Gyan Chaturvedi’s THE MADHOUSE
Literature The Chakkar 03/05/25 Literature The Chakkar 03/05/25

The Revolution Will Be Commodified: Gyan Chaturvedi’s THE MADHOUSE

In a world filled with abstractions, the greatest clarity in Gyan Chaturvedi’s The Madhouse (Pagalkhana) comes from the protagonist’s never-ending pursuit for escape: an escape from the Bazaar, from the dependence on commodification, from being commodified themselves. By Karan Madhok

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Hinduism Outside the Box: A Conversation with Manu Pillai
Literature The Chakkar 12/04/25 Literature The Chakkar 12/04/25

Hinduism Outside the Box: A Conversation with Manu Pillai

Manu Pillai, the author of Gods, Guns and Missionaries, speaks to Amritesh Mukherjee about history beyond monochromatic brushstrokes, the highs and lows of social media discourse, Hindu plurality, and some recommended books.

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Poetry as Ritual Magic: Rajorshi Patranabis’s GOSSIPS OF OUR SURROGATE STORY
Literature The Chakkar 07/04/25 Literature The Chakkar 07/04/25

Poetry as Ritual Magic: Rajorshi Patranabis’s GOSSIPS OF OUR SURROGATE STORY

Poetry is a prayerful medium to explore complex, living concepts. Just as fruit falls from the bough to decay within earth and feed the tree, Rajorshi Patranabis’s presents the ritual of cyclical love and devotion in his new collection. By Dustin Pickering

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Burrow of the Mind: A response to Amit Shankar Saha’s poetry in ETESIAN::BARAHMASI
Creativity, Literature The Chakkar 03/04/25 Creativity, Literature The Chakkar 03/04/25

Burrow of the Mind: A response to Amit Shankar Saha’s poetry in ETESIAN::BARAHMASI

‘Your book felt like the scent of passing months, layered with flowers, rain, spring and autumn—a scent that reached into the city’s deep burrows.’ By Sufia Khatoon

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The Divine Lens: A Biography of Raghu Rai
Literature The Chakkar 20/02/25 Literature The Chakkar 20/02/25

The Divine Lens: A Biography of Raghu Rai

Through intimate details and dialogues, Rachna Singh’s Raghu Rai: Waiting for the Divine invites readers into the expansive vision of the man often hailed as the father of Indian photography. By Neera Kashyap

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Where do we find a story? An interview with Snehaprava Das
Literature The Chakkar 14/02/25 Literature The Chakkar 14/02/25

Where do we find a story? An interview with Snehaprava Das

Poet, author, and translator Snehaprava Das speaks to Mitra Samal about her storytelling process, how translation can enhance creativity, the authors that have inspired her, and more.  

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Heer, Ranjha, and Haroon Khalid’s Infinite Story of Love
Literature The Chakkar 25/01/25 Literature The Chakkar 25/01/25

Heer, Ranjha, and Haroon Khalid’s Infinite Story of Love

Haroon Khalid’s 2024 novel From Waris to Heer (Penguin) is an answer to the refrain of timeless stories—a tale of love and loss, power and rebellion, retold with the lilt of a Sufi melody. By Amritesh Mukherjee

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TEN INDIAN CLASSICS: Selections from ‘Selected Ghazals and Other Poems’ by Mir Taqi Mir
Creativity, Literature The Chakkar 22/12/24 Creativity, Literature The Chakkar 22/12/24

TEN INDIAN CLASSICS: Selections from ‘Selected Ghazals and Other Poems’ by Mir Taqi Mir

Extract from the work of Mir Taqi Mir: Mir’s poetry abounds in bawdiness, the pain and enjoyment of life, instances of homosexuality, Sufi themes, close and wise observation of the world, and insistence on man’s dignity. Translated by: Shamsur Rahman Faruqi

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Calcutta’s Chromosome, Hidden in Plain Sight
Misc., Literature The Chakkar 09/12/24 Misc., Literature The Chakkar 09/12/24

Calcutta’s Chromosome, Hidden in Plain Sight

Ronald Ross was once immortalized in Amitav Ghosh’s historical novel. Nivedita Dey rediscovers a memorial dedicated to Kolkata’s forgotten, Nobel laureate physician.

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BLASPHEAR by Sohail Rauf: Religion, Fear, and the Cost of Silence
Literature The Chakkar 05/12/24 Literature The Chakkar 05/12/24

BLASPHEAR by Sohail Rauf: Religion, Fear, and the Cost of Silence

Set against a backdrop of religious abuse and suffocating intolerance, Sohali Rauf’s Blasphear is a sharp commentary on the ideas of nationhood, and how its intangible forces act as blind shepherds, leading the masses down paths they cannot question. By Amritesh Mukherjee

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