Blog
Amulya and Deeksha discuss Astronomy as a theme and look at Relativity by Sarah Howe and Sonnet 14 by Shakespeare.
Amulya and Deeksha discuss I Will Meet You Yet Again by Amrita Pritam translated by Nirupama Dutt and Autopsy Day Twenty Four by Kim Heysoon translated by Don Mee Choi, for Women in Translation Month.
A weekend at Biligirirangana Hills, K. Gudi, Gorukana Wellness Retreat with a little twist of Murakami
For the last instalment of the month, Amulya and Deeksha discuss the movie ‘Midnight in Paris’ (2011)
Amulya and Deeksha discuss Hope as a theme and look at “Hope” is the thing with feathers by Emily Dickinson and Hope by Emily Brontë.
Amulya and Deeksha discuss short stories This Way for Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen by Tadeusz Borowski and What We Talk When We Talk About Anne Frank by Nathan Englander.
Amulya and Deeksha discuss On Children by Kahlil Gibran and For Peshawar by Fatimah Asghar.
Living in Mysuru today, though you get to witness a growing café culture, you also have to bear some of the restaurants you had grown to hold a special place for, shutter. This post is a tribute to some of the lost gems, that at one point or another, shaped the city with their food and culture.
Silverfish opened its doors on the 1st of July 2020, to be a leisure destination in itself, a bookstore one didn’t end up associating with everything it shouldn’t be.
We move through the notes, fruity to caramel sweet to woody, almost earthy tones, slowly savouring, both the chocolate and the Sunday slipping away.
Maybe, at the end of it all, the distance does not matter and what matters is you walk in, and the same warmth you left with, envelopes you back.
Dr. R. Purnima, retired professor, KSOU, and the founder of Children’s Literary Club, performs her one-woman play, ‘Stage Chemistry: Neuropsychiatric Disorders on Stage’ at the Department of English, University of Mysore