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The Emperor's General by Rima Hooja

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  I have been fascinated by Rajput history since childhood. Although I had heard many stories about the Rajputs from my father, this was the first time I truly engaged with the subject through a book. That personal connection made the reading experience even more meaningful. For many in India, Raja Man Singh’s legacy remains deeply contested. He is often placed in a rigid historiographical binary: dismissed by some as merely a vassal and a “Hindu collaborator” of the Mughal “invaders,” and condemned by others, especially for his role in the Battle of Haldighati against Maharana Pratap, as a traitor to Rajput independence. Rima Hooja’s central argument challenges both these views. She restores Man Singh from this reductive narrative and presents him as a pan-Indian figure and a principal architect of the Mughal Empire in his own right. The book offers a detailed account of Man Singh’s campaigns, alliances, and statesmanship, showing how he helped secure and expand the empire. Yet he...

From Dynasties to Democracy by Deep Mukherjee and Tabeenah Anjum

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There isn’t a vast body of literature on Rajasthan’s politics in English, which makes this book a valuable and timely read. For anyone looking to understand the state’s political landscape, it offers more than enough to grasp the essentials. I personally approached Rajasthan’s politics with little prior interest or understanding, but this book changed that completely. The authors take readers on a compelling journey from the early years of independent India to the present day, tracing the political evolution of Rajasthan with clarity and depth. At the heart of the narrative are the state’s most influential political figures— Bhairon Singh Shekhawat , Ashok Gehlot , and Vasundhara Raje . The book captures their rivalries, leadership styles, and the political equations that have shaped Rajasthan’s power dynamics over the decades. One of the more fascinating portrayals is of Raje, whose mass appeal is rooted in her ability to connect with women and children across Rajasthan, often trans...

From the King’s Table to Street Food by Puspesh Pant

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I chose this book because I had spent significant time in Sonipat during my undergraduate years and had always been fascinated by Delhi. After reading it, I regretted not being born in Delhi and being part of such a rich history. In From the King’s Table to Street Food , Pushpesh Pant never explicitly argues that food is political; he lets the narrative reveal it. Through his portrayal of Delhi’s culinary past, he captures a city continually reshaped by displacement, war, disease, migration, and caste hierarchies. “We must also remember that many of the so-called traditions of Delhi’s food are hardly older than 175 years.” That’s a statement that dismantles the fantasy of some eternal, static culinary identity. Instead, Pant presents a more compelling truth: both the city and its cuisine are products of constant movement and reinvention. This approach defines the book's strength. Rather than offering a rigid, scholarly account, Pant crafts a fluid and accessible memoir that invit...

The Marwaris: From Jagat Seth to the Birlas by Thomas A Timberg

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 This book was picked up out of a long-standing fascination with the migration of Marwaris and their remarkable success across diverse fields of Indian business. It offers a detailed account of the role played by Indian business communities during the British Raj, with particular emphasis on the migration of Marwaris from Rajasthan to commercial centres of that time such as Calcutta. Drawing on archival sources like business registers and ledger entries, the narrative reconstructs their steady rise during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The book also highlights the expansion of influential business houses such as the Jagat Seths and examines their complex relationship with British colonial authorities. At its core, the book seeks to answer a compelling question: why have Marwaris been disproportionately successful in Indian business? Timberg approaches this by analysing patterns of migration, the community’s embeddedness in the bazaar economy, and their gradual transitio...