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WELCOME TO INDIAN BOOKMARK BY SAMEER GUDHATE
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Reviewing Salt and Blood by Amit D'Souza Insights by Sameer Gudhate
There’s a particular kind of silence that follows a question you cannot answer — not because you lack intelligence, but because the pieces simply refuse to sit still. That is the silence I carried while reading Salt and Blood by Amit D'Souza. Not a loud, heart-racing thriller silence. A slower one. The kind that lingers like humidity before a storm that may or may not arrive. At first glance, this is the story of Inspector Sheela Sawant investigating a body found under unse
Sameer Gudhate
6 days ago3 min read


Sameer Gudhate Presents the Book Review of Musafir Café by Divya Prakash Dubey
Some love stories don’t explode. They simmer. And Musafir Café feels exactly like that—two cups of chai growing cold between conversations that were never fully finished. Divya Prakash Dubey places us gently into the lives of Sudha and Chander, two people introduced through the most traditional route possible—a parental matrimonial setup—only to find themselves questioning the very institution that brought them together. Sudha, a divorce lawyer who has watched marriages unr
Sameer Gudhate
Feb 113 min read


Sameer Gudhate Presents the Book Review of Mussoorie Murders by Divyaroop Bhatnagar
There are books you read with a cup of tea in hand, letting the warmth seep into your palms while the pages gently turn. And then there are books that snatch the cup right out of your grasp, sending it crashing to the floor because—what just happened? The Mussoorie Murders by Divyaroop Bhatnagar did exactly that to me. I opened it expecting a quiet weekend read. Instead, I found myself wide awake past midnight, staring at the ceiling, replaying clues like a detective who refu
Sameer Gudhate
Nov 29, 20254 min read


Sameer Gudhate Presents the Book Review of The Do-Over by Lynn Painter
There are days that taste like heartbreak — metallic and cold — and there are days that smell of rain-soaked second chances. The Do-Over by Lynn Painter lives somewhere between the two, looping endlessly in that bittersweet space where pain and hope take turns holding your heart. I still remember my first Lynn Painter read — Better Than the Movies — a warm, quirky rom-com that made me believe in the healing power of laughter. Painter has that uncanny gift: she writes teen s
Sameer Gudhate
Nov 13, 20254 min read
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