• In 2020, when the pandemic forced the government to announce a lockdown, several States adopted digital contact tracing and drones to monitor citizens. Siddharth Sonkar analyses the history of privacy in India and establishes why objecting to interference with privacy is the pressing need of the day in What Privacy Means: Why It Matters and How We Can Protect It (Hachette India). 
  • December in Dacca: The Indian Armed Forces and the 1971 Bangladesh Liberation War (HarperCollins) by K.S. Nair is an anecdotal account of the 1971 war. The book sets the battles within their diplomatic, strategic and tactical contexts. Providing a glimpse into the lives of some of the heroes once the dust had settled, Nair celebrates India’s military and moral victory. 
  • When the kids are grown, Mercy Garrett moves herself out of the chaotic family home to her neat studio in Anne Tyler’s new novel French Braid (Chatto & Windus). Yet it is a clutter of untidy moments that forms the Garrett’s family life over the decades, and it all began in 1959, with a family holiday by a lake, whose effects ripple through generations. 
  • In Sabaa Tahir’s All My Rage (Razorbill), the story travels from Lahore to California as Misbah and Toufiq migrate to the U.S. and open a motel there. Their son Salahuddin and his best friend Noor understand each other the way nobody does, until The Fight, which destroys the bond. The two must ask themselves what their friendship is worth.