Download Free Meerans Stories Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Meerans Stories and write the review.

About the Book "In the realm of the living, greatness is ephemeral, but madness transcends mortality, haunting even the inanimate..." In the shadow of a haunted past, an obsession takes root, threatening to consume everything in its path. Welcome to Kiff House, where the line between greatness and madness blurs, and one woman's relentless quest to achieve her goals endangers the safety of her own family. Mahira, a determined IAS officer striving to integrate the desolate village of Meeran with Bangalore, finds herself confronted by the chilling secrets hidden within the walls of her new home. With each terrifying revelation, her grip on sanity weakens, stretching the boundaries of her mind to the breaking point. Accompany Mahira and her family - Sharman, her husband and retired music teacher, and Ayush, their inquisitive ten-year-old son - as they navigate the mysteries, lore, and supernatural presences of their new home. Immerse yourself in this captivating gothic horror tale, where the fragility of the human mind collides with the sinister forces lurking in the shadows. About the Author Shival Gupta lives in Bangalore, India and works in technology and software. He hails from Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh. A life-long fan of literary horror, “The Violins That Play At Kiff House” is his first entry in the gothic genre.
Meeran's Stories give us a glimpse, at once, of the inner life of two entities, two identities. First, of South India. Second of Muslim South India. They are about a particular people but more, they are about people. They are about a particular place but more, about the place of feeling in the desert of custom.
‘Knit India Through Literature...' is a mega literary project, first of its kind in Indian literature, is the result of the penance-yagna done for 16 years by Sivasankari, noted Tamil writer. 'Knit India Through Literature' has inolved intense sourcing, research and translation of literature from 18 Indian languages. The project she says aims to introduce Indians to other Indians through literature and culture and help knit them together. The interviews of stalwart writers from all 18 languages approved by the eighth schedule of Indian Constitution, accompanied by a creative work of the respective writer are published with her travelogues of different regions, along with an indepth article by a scholar on the cultural and literary heritage of each of the language, in four volumes - South, East, West and North respectively. Her travelogues, her interviews and the overview of each literature she has sought, all reveal one important unity... the concern our writers and poets express in their works for the problems that beset our country today. Through her project Sivasankari feels writers can make an invaluable contribution with their writings to change the thinking of the people and help eliminate those problems. In this volume ‘South’ she deals with four languages Malayalam, Kannada, Telugu and Tamil that are spoken in southern region of India.
Prologue Noora was sitting at a front-view table in the White and Blue Restaurant of the Greek Club, overlooking the Qaitbay Citadel, the old port and the Mediterranean Sea. This was where her journey of transformation began more than ten years ago. A journey that had taken her and several of her friends along a ride through the treacherous workings of Fate: awry choices and ignored blessings, confused identities and stubborn egos, bad marriages and worse friendships, toxic parents and dogmatic cultures, religious fundamentalism, adultery and depression, and finally, change. Always change. Inevitable change.
The stories in this anthology, some of them appearing for the first time in English translation, seek to give a larger view of Yashpal as a short-story writer as well as provide a taste of his forthright approach to the questions of his times. Whether exploring the theme of the complicity of the ruled with the rulers, or the unquestioning supplication of human beings to a deity or faith, or social reform and social protest, the stories are coloured by the author's deep concern for the India he fought for and dreamt of. In a world weary of territorial strife, religious rancour and social iniquities, the stories are perhaps more relevant today than when they were written almost fifty years back.
Meeran Chadha Borwankar, an IPS officer of Maharashtra, has a story to share with young girls and women. A story that is important, honest and pertinent. A story every young woman with dreams of making it big and leading a dignified life must read. It is the story of a small town girl from Punjab cracking the UPSC exam and battling for survival in a male dominated police department. Could she just strive or did she thrive? Full of real life interesting anecdotes from her career, Meeran wants to share the lessons she learnt with the youth. She wants to flag some action points that would enable the young to steer their lives and careers in the right direction. She wants to contribute to enhancing leadership skills of the young. Hence along with wielding the baton, this police officer also decided to pick up the pen.