On the shelf: Books you might find interesting

Here’s a roundup of some must-read books offering unique insights into diverse topics, this week.

My Name is Jasmine, The Madhouse, What You Do Is Who You Are, Proto
On the shelf

Hubris Maximus

Faiz Siddiqui

HarperCollins

Pp 336, Rs 599

At a moment when America’s tech gods are more influential than ever, Hubris Maximus is a cautionary tale about the pitfalls of lionising magnetic leaders. The Washington Post journalist Faiz Siddiqui offers a gripping, detailed portrait of a singularly messy and lucrative period in Elon Musk’s career, as well as a case study in the power of using one’s platform to shape the public narrative in a world that can’t turn away from its screens.

What You Do Is Who You Are

Ben Horowitz

HarperCollins

Pp 288, Rs 699

The times and circumstances in which people were raised often shape them—yet a few leaders have managed to shape their times. In this follow-up to The Hard Thing About Hard Things, Ben Horowitz turns his attention to a question crucial to every organisation—How do you create and sustain the culture you want? This book is a journey through cultures ancient to modern, spotlighting models of leadership and culture-building.

Proto

Laura Spinney

HarperCollins

Pp 336, Rs 599

A language was born between Europe and Asia as the planet emerged from the last ice age. This ancient tongue soon exploded out of its cradle, changing and fragmenting as it went, until its offsprings were spoken from Scotland to China. Today, these constitute the world’s largest language family. The book retraces the Indo-European odyssey across continents and millennia to answer the question of how one ancient language went global.

The Madhouse

Gyan Chaturvedi, Punarvasu Joshi

Niyogi Books

Pp 458, Rs 595

The Madhouse is an allegorical novel that chronicles the jarring transformations occurring in the psyche of Indian society by the onslaught of liberalisation in the 1990s. It is in this reign of the free-market economy and excessive consumption that the nameless characters of The Madhouse find themselves. The book captures the subtle as well as profound changes related to people’s psyche, belief systems, notions of honour and self-respect, among others.

My Name is Jasmine

Shashi Warrier

Simon & Schuster

Pp 320, Rs 499

This is a dark political tale set in contemporary India. The protagonist wakes up in a hospital ward unaware of how she got there. Through police interrogation, she regains her memory and, in the process, we discover more about her troubled past. She befriends a lawyer and therapist, but can they help discover her real identity? The book depicts the current conflicts raging through the country’s heartland bringing out stories which are often overlooked in contemporary Indian fiction.

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This article was first uploaded on April nineteen, twenty twenty-five, at fifty minutes past ten in the night.
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