<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">Stop Marrying Your Niece!</span></p>.<p>Dr Najoo Varkey</p>.<p>Printo, pp 51, free on request</p>.<p>This is an account of the medical activism undertaken by the author in her bid to stop the practice of consanguineous marriage with its disastrous health consequences for the offspring of such unions.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">The Ten Commandments Of Evil</span></p>.<p>Vignesh Sivasankar</p>.<p>Readomania, pp 288, Rs 350</p>.<p>In these stories, the author ventures into a dark neverland, offering a deeply rewarding antidote to understanding the mysteries of the unknown.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">A Kiss After Dying</span></p>.<p>Ashok Banker</p>.<p>Penguin, pp 400, Rs 399</p>.<p>Ricky Manfredi is living an idyllic playboy life when he meets Hannah. Both are falling for each other. Hannah knows that can’t be allowed to happen. Because murder is only the first stage of her plan.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">The Inconceivable Idea Of The Sun</span></p>.<p>Anil Menon</p>.<p>Hachette, pp 280, Rs 599</p>.<p>This stellar collection of short fiction, as poignant as it is playful, blurs the distinction between what lies inside a story and what lies outside it.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">Gupshup Goes To Prison</span></p>.<p>Arefa Tehsin and Shubhangi Chetan<br />(Illustrator)</p>.<p>Duckbill, pp 80, Rs 199</p>.<p>Khalid’s cat Gupshup has run away to a prison. An open prison it is called, but everyone knows that prisons are full of horrible, evil people.<br />Or are they?</p>
<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">Stop Marrying Your Niece!</span></p>.<p>Dr Najoo Varkey</p>.<p>Printo, pp 51, free on request</p>.<p>This is an account of the medical activism undertaken by the author in her bid to stop the practice of consanguineous marriage with its disastrous health consequences for the offspring of such unions.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">The Ten Commandments Of Evil</span></p>.<p>Vignesh Sivasankar</p>.<p>Readomania, pp 288, Rs 350</p>.<p>In these stories, the author ventures into a dark neverland, offering a deeply rewarding antidote to understanding the mysteries of the unknown.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">A Kiss After Dying</span></p>.<p>Ashok Banker</p>.<p>Penguin, pp 400, Rs 399</p>.<p>Ricky Manfredi is living an idyllic playboy life when he meets Hannah. Both are falling for each other. Hannah knows that can’t be allowed to happen. Because murder is only the first stage of her plan.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">The Inconceivable Idea Of The Sun</span></p>.<p>Anil Menon</p>.<p>Hachette, pp 280, Rs 599</p>.<p>This stellar collection of short fiction, as poignant as it is playful, blurs the distinction between what lies inside a story and what lies outside it.</p>.<p class="ListingGrey"><span class="bold">Gupshup Goes To Prison</span></p>.<p>Arefa Tehsin and Shubhangi Chetan<br />(Illustrator)</p>.<p>Duckbill, pp 80, Rs 199</p>.<p>Khalid’s cat Gupshup has run away to a prison. An open prison it is called, but everyone knows that prisons are full of horrible, evil people.<br />Or are they?</p>