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From the Biblio files

We’ve been eating our way through the ever-expanding pile of books on the Brunch bookshelf. Sample these

Updated on: Aug 02, 2014 07:41 PM IST
Hindustan Times | By
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A THRILLING NOVEL ABOUT ZOMBIES



THE BOOK:The Girl With All The Gifts by MR Carey

THE GIST: A desolate Britain, destroyed by a zombie apocalypse. A small number of human beings are holding out against the undead at a fortified army base of sorts. This is also home to children infected with the zombie fungus (but who retain the ability to think rationally, learn and react to most human emotions). Melanie, a 10-year-old kid, is living out her routine life as a test subject for scientists trying to find a cure. Until an incident forces them to leave the base.

http://www.hindustantimes.com/Images/popup/2014/7/0308brunchpg34a.jpgREAD IT FOR: An interesting zombie back story. The ‘hungries’ have all been infected by Ophiocordyceps unilateralis, an actual fungus. Here, it attaches itself to a host body (ants usually), kills the ant but continues to grow. Then the fungal spores burst and latch on to other unfortunate ants. Pretty cool, right? And the way this fungus hops over species, infecting human beings is cooler still.

QUICK REVIEW: It’s difficult to shove past clichés when writing horror (more so if you narrow it down to a niche – like zombie novels) but this is a commendable departure from the usual.

CAUTION: Predictably, there is scientific insight and jargon. And a subtext of science vs morality.

BEST LINES:You can’t save people from the world. There’s nowhere else to take them.



-by Asad Ali
HANDS DOWN, THIS IS BOOK OF THE MONTH



THE BOOK:No Country by Kalyan Ray

Books-Getty
Books-Getty
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THE GIST: It is the year 1989 and twin murders unfold with surprising calm on the first page of this book. Then the novel draws you in, lightly by the hand at first and then with a kind of magnetism that drags you – headfirst – across two continents over two centuries, chasing two bloodlines through potato fields in Ireland, mangrove forests in Bengal, the tomb of a pir in Dhaka, Calcutta at Partition, an iceberg in the Atlantic and, incredibly, the Jallianwala Bagh massacre.

This is a book about homes, lost and found, and the journeys to their reclamation; this is a book about the yearning for an identity; this is a book about what it means to belong to a country.

QUICK REVIEW: In his beautiful voice, Ray has created characters that seem to glow out the pages with their humanness, each voice fragile and strong at once, grappling with its own set of heartache and history.

READ THIS IF: You’re into masterful storytelling, gripping narratives and/or love books in general.

CAUTION: This is a book that WILL take its time and only when it’s done with you, some 50 hours later, will you emerge – dazed, bruised, stronger and irrevocably in love.

BEST LINES:If I think of nations, it is when they are misbehaving, or are playing sports like good boys. What does it mean to belong to a nation? Is it the accident of birth? Is it a memory, a yearning for some obscure stamp on the soul, some tune that plays in the blood? Or is it what others insist you are – painting your corner of the room around you?



-by Richa
THE ONE WITH POWERFUL PROTAGONIST



THE BOOK:The Legend of Ramulamma by Vithal Rajan

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Also read: Why Ashwin Sanghi, James Patterson should write a Bollywood thriller

From HT Brunch, August 3
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