The Saint & The Sceptic
Is ‘research’ enough to bust the Mother Teresa ‘myth’?
Is ‘research’ enough to bust the Mother Teresa ‘myth’?
The third ever Indian-American in the US Congress on his hopes for future ties with Gujarat
Wracked by ethnic and sectarian violence, the people of Karachi search mindspace for peace
Young consultant economists plough through a maze of facts to put together the Economic Survey
The acting secretary-general of Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami on his organisation and its role
The Yahoo! CEO’s come-to-office command sets off a flexitime debate
Women’s bank? SEWA has been doing it for 39 years
An unchallenged platform for Modi, not free speech, is the issue
The third ever Indian-American in the US Congress on his hopes for future ties with Gujarat
The Modi talk is cancelled, but Indian Americans still debate a polarising figure
Wracked by ethnic and sectarian violence, the people of Karachi search mindspace for peace
Young consultant economists plough through a maze of facts to put together the Economic Survey
The world mustn’t misinterpret a country’s fight for its syncretic soul
The acting secretary-general of Bangladesh Jamaat-e-Islami on his organisation and its role
The Jamaat-e-Islami isn’t all villainy. India needs to engage with this part of Bangladesh.
Mother’s saintliness renewed itself for him each time he met her
He had given Hitchens his vote, and his views remain unchanged
Mother House spokesperson was brief, to the point and dismissive of the charges.
The woman whom Mother is supposed to have “healed” after death
One of the authors of the scathing paper which has triggered a fresh appraisal of the 'Saint of the Gutters'
A Tipu Sultan University, and in BJP-ruled Karnataka?
A whole village turns suspect and spy in the murder of three minor girls
The 26/11 film is again proof—the once cult director has lost it
For all the hubbub, no one wants to speak against him
Pujara, adept at both attack and defence, is staying at the crease
Harnessing digital technology, a new breed of archivists is spreading India’s soul-stuff
The rot runs deep and cuts across states
There’s no contesting the happy anticipatory effects of deep-fried carbs at Krispy Kreme
If the book wished to look like a diary, it kind of succeeds, though I believe it is more akin to a magazine.
A fascinating account, although it takes the well-set, well-known pattern of so many celebrated stories of dreamer-doers.
Hazrat Mahal, wife of Wajid Ali Shah, fought the British in 1857. A French journalist brings her little-known story to life.
Ghose almost unapologetically scrapes the surface by not bothering to delve deeper.
Things remain utterly dull, uninspiring and don’t get engaging. It’s badly cast — the actors just don’t measure up
Banker-turned-author Amish Tripathi on the Rs 5-crore advance for his next series of books, and why he’s happier as a writer.
My learned views were recorded by 38 news channels and appeared in 58 newspapers.
On my first day in Venice, I was too mesmerised by the view from my hotel to even put on my Bata sandals