The book is a descriptive analysis of India's foreign policy vis-a-vis nine neighbouring countries
Mr Levy and Ms Scott-Clark are known for their detailing and their latest book will not disappoint their readers
Book review of Genius Makers: The Mavericks Who Brought AI to Google, Facebook and the World
The book is filled with such contorted and convoluted interpretations of Gandhi, so as to forcefully pin a "free market capitalist" label on him
Most of Rationality is given over to ideas from game theory and behavioural economics
A coffee table book tries to present the omniscient past of this timeless city
The book consists of three "parts" (Part 1: Storytelling Elements; Part 2: Storytelling Channels; Part 3: Pulling It All Together)
Bullets Over Bombay is divided into seven chapters, each of which is a well-considered essay on various aspects of the film
The excitement and euphoria around poppers were unreal and unmatched and remain so
The reader may also find some more flavoursome nuggets of information embedded in the pages
Never mind Lost; Ms Grisham has far more classic pop-culture analogies at her fingertips
Vir's special skill has been an ability to make complex issues easy to understand
The subject of Hindu civilisation has acquired in India a new political idiom, especially in recent years
The book has several evocative examples of how government, business, and not-for-profits work (and don't work)
Mr Purandare reminds us that Hitler's view of India was shaped by another Briton, a political philosopher called Houston Chamberlain
The Contrarian isn't just about Peter Thiel; it's about Silicon Valley's political coming-of-age, too
Why do latter-day economists write everything but economics in their autobiographies?
Mongol faith was based on propitiating the spirit of nature and venerating ancestors
One of the highlights of the book is the detailed analysis of the enigma
This is a great primer in a developing story and highly recommended