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WELCOME TO INDIAN BOOKMARK BY SAMEER GUDHATE
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Sameer Gudhate on The Perfumist of Paris: When Memory Finds Its Fragrance
There are some stories that don’t end when the plot does… they linger like a scent you can’t quite name, but can’t forget either. That was my experience with The Perfumist of Paris by Alka Joshi. Not because it overwhelms you with drama. But because it quietly settles into your senses—layer by layer—until you realize you’re not just reading Radha’s life… you’re inhaling it. Set in 1970s Paris, the narrative follows Radha at a stage where life, on the surface, looks comp
Sameer Gudhate
5 days ago3 min read


Sameer Gudhate on The Secret Keeper of Jaipur: Not All Collapses Are Accidental
There’s a certain kind of story that doesn’t begin when you open the book… it begins when you return to a world you thought you had already understood. That was my experience walking back into The Secret Keeper of Jaipur by Alka Joshi. Because this isn’t just a continuation. It’s a shift. The first time we met Lakshmi, the narrative was soaked in texture—colors, rituals, quiet survival. Here, the air feels different. Thinner. Faster. Almost like the story has stopped ob
Sameer Gudhate
6 days ago3 min read


Sameer Gudhate on The Henna Artist: The Quiet Cost of Independence
There’s a certain kind of courage that doesn’t announce itself loudly… it just quietly refuses to go back. That’s the feeling that stayed with me while reading The Henna Artist by Alka Joshi. Not the kind of courage we celebrate on stages. The quieter one. The kind that rebuilds a life from scratch… and then guards it like a secret. Lakshmi’s journey begins in escape—but what unfolds is not a story of running away. It’s a story of carefully constructing a life where eve
Sameer Gudhate
Apr 233 min read


Discovering the Intricacies of Six Days in Bombay by Alka Joshi through Sameer Gudhate's Review
There’s something unsettling about the idea that six ordinary days can reroute an entire life. Not years. Not decades. Six days. That quiet tension hums beneath Six Days in Bombay, the latest standalone from Alka Joshi, and it caught me off guard. I went in expecting historical richness and atmospheric detail. I did not expect to feel personally confronted by a young nurse’s hunger for a life larger than the one she’d been handed. We meet Sona Falstaff in 1937 Bombay —
Sameer Gudhate
Feb 203 min read
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