It's safe to see that no Independence Day goes without watching Ben Kingsley's biopic of Mahatma Gandhi. Similarly, there's no better way to jog up your memory on the Father of the Nation than reading his autobiographyThe Story of My Experiments With Truth. Originally published in parts in a magazine, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi recalls his childhood days all the way up to 1921 when he had already established himself as the torchbearer of India's freedom struggle. Photo Credit: Fingerprint! Publishing
Written by India's first Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru,The Discovery of Indiaoffers a view of Indian history, philosophy and culture, from the perspective of a freedom fighter. Nehru penned the book during his incarceration at the Ahmednagar Fort between 1942 and 1946. Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons
Ramchandra Guha's book offers a deep insight into the 19 foremost individuals who shaped India's political sentiment from Gandhi to Ambedkar and sheds light on the uniqueness of Indian democracy. Photo Credit: Penguin Random House
Historian Bipan Chandra's book is a comprehensive account of India's freedom movement and its freedomfighters.India's Struggle for Independence has served as an entry point to a number of individuals interested in the Indian history. Credit:Penguin Random House
Dr Shashi Tharoor'sAn Era of Darkness(now known asInglorious Empire: What the British Did to India) talks of the effects that British colonial rule had on India. It is based on his viral speech in 2015 at Oxford on the topic"Does Britain owe reparations to its former colonies?" In the book, the Parliamentarian explains in detail how the British Empire plunderedIndia of its vast natural resources and shatters misconceptions of India having benefited from colonial rule. PhotoCredit: Aleph Book Company
Written by Dominique Lapierre and Larry Collins,Freedom at Midnightrecounts the events that led to India's independence while also talking about the roles played by Mahatma Gandhi, Muhammad Ali Jinnah and the last British Viceroy, Lord Mountbatten. Photo Credit: Aleph Book Company