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Thrillers to Remember

Black Suits You is a gripping, fast-paced and a clever psycho-sexual thriller that will keep you guessing till the end.

The unwavering calm of the Anantha Padmanabha Swamy Temple in Thiruvananthapuram is disturbed when a dead body turns up in its holy pond . . . Read more in In the Name of God.

The Girl Who Knew Too Much is a dark and suspenseful romance mystery, where Akshara is left face-to-face with a truth that will make her doubt not just Harry but herself as well . . .

The Love Connection

Ravinder Singh’s I Too Had a Love Story is for anyone who believes in the magic of love . . .
Durjoy Datta’s Our Impossible Love presents life the way it is and love the way it should be.
See love from a completely different angle with Sudeep Nagarkar’s It Started with a Friend Request.

The Boy You’ve Loved Reading About Box Set

Raghu pretends that there is nothing remarkable about his life even as he hides a dark secret. At the same time, he feels drawn to the fascinating Brahmi-a girl quite like him, yet so different. No matter how hard Raghu tries, he begins to care… Then life throws him into the deep end and he has to face his worst fears. Will love be strong enough to pull him out?

On a fateful night, two years ago, Raghu couldn’t save his first love, Brahmi. Another blow to his heart that he must hide from the world, but the annoying and persistent Advaita just won’t let him be. She wants to love him back to life but she must find out what wrecked him in the first place.

UNMUKT BHARAT

India Unbound is the riveting story of a nation’s rise from poverty to prosperity and the clash of ideas that occurred along the way. Gurcharan Das examines the highs and lows of independent India through the prism of history, his own experiences and those of numerous others he has met-from young people in sleepy UP villages to chiefs of software companies in Bangalore. Defining and exploring the new mindset of the nation, Unmukt Bharat is the perfect introduction to contemporary India.

Fun with Maths Value Pack

The Fun with Maths books seek to do exactly what the name suggests-show children how to have fun while they explore the joy of mathematics. Packed with activities, puzzles and games, this series will help children develop logical and numeracy skills without even realizing they are doing maths! For ages 7+.

Fun with Science Value Pack

Who said science was boring? Each of the six fun books in this value pack consists of a wealth of carefully selected, safe yet exciting experiments under uniquely themed categories. With the help of detailed step-by-step instructions, all of these can be done at home with easily available household items! Every experiment includes a simple explanation of the scientific concept behind it, demystifying the wonder of science. For ages 7+.

The Adventures of Biplob the Bumblebee

Don’t worry, bee happy–Biplob’s on his way
Biplop is a very busy bumblebee. When he isn’t collecting nectar, he is off on rollicking adventures to save his garden with the help of his friends, farmer Balram and the flowers. From harvesting water to saving baby plants from a dangerous infection, join Biplob as he comes up with innovative ideas that are always eco-friendly. These vibrantly illustrated stories promise to teach kids something new through lessons on science and friendship.

FELU DA AND COMPANY

Feluda and Company is the internationally-acclaimed filmmaker, writer and director, Satyajit Ray’s thrilling detective novel. The hero, Feluda is an interesting, mysterious and wealthy character; an amateur detective. He sets off to Mumbai to save his friend, Lalmohan Ganguly (aka Jatayu), who goes there with a story for a film and gets embroiled in a deadly conspiracy. In Gosainpur, he hatches a plot to get himself murdered and expose the antics of Mrigank Bhattacharya, who famously summons spirits from the afterworld. Along with keeping the reader in suspense amidst the mysterious happenings, this novel also is a satire that exposes the hypocrisies hidden under grand displays.

THE HOLY VEDAS: Rig Veda, Yajur Veda, Sama Veda and Atharva Veda (Gift Edition)

The four Vedas contain the divine, infallible knowledge revealed to those primal men whose soul was specially illuminated to by the grace of god to receive and impart humanity the words of almighty god. The Vedas are the sacred heritage not only of India but of all mankind. In this book an attempt has been made to bring together representative hymns which encompass all the aspects enshrined in the Vedas. The author has tried to retain the spirit of the original Sanskrit mantras in English renderings and to impart some of the holy ambience of these sacred texts which are the fountainhead of Hindu philosophy and culture

The Women’s Library

Featuring the works of K.R. Meera, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni and Anita Nair, this limited edition set is essential reading for those who love reading fiction from South Asia.

Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni’s Oleander Girl revolves around seventeen-year-old Korobi Roy who, troubled by the silence that surrounds her parents’ death, clings to her only inheritance from them: the unfinished love note she found hidden in her mother’s book of poetry. But when her grandfather dies, she discovers a dark secret which will finally explain her past.

The bold, wry and ebullient stories of Yellow Is the Colour of Longing put on display K.R. Meera’s astonishing range of narrative techniques, as she expertly lays bare the fault lines behind the façades of everyday life, sometimes with dark humour and sometimes with astoundingly bitter sadness.

Forty-five and single, Akhila has never been allowed to live her life-she is always a daughter, a sister, an aunt and a provider first-until the day she buys a one-way train ticket to the seaside town of Kanyakumari. Anita Nair’s Ladies Coupé unfolds in an intimate atmosphere as Akhila gets to know her five fellow travellers. Riveted by their stories, she seeks an answer to the question that has haunted her all her life: can a woman stay single and be happy, or does she need a man to feel complete?

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