Akash Kapuris the former writer of the "Letter from India" column for theInternational Herald Tribune, which has been picked up in the Week in Review section ofThe New York Timeson occasion. He has also written forThe Atlantic,The Economist,The New Yorker, andThe New York Times Book Review. He holds a BA in Social Anthropology from Harvard University, and a doctorate in Law from Oxford University, which he attended as a Rhodes Scholar. He consults on development and media law for a number of organizations, including the United Nations. He lives outside Pondicherry in Southern India.
“This takes, wisely, a humble approach: instead of trying to
encapsulate the entirety of India’s changes, it follows a few lives
along the idiosyncratic ways they develop. For people who savored
Katherine Boo’s Behind the Beautiful Forevers.”—Evan Osnos,
newyorker.com
"[A] lucid, balanced new book . . . Kapur is determinedly
fair-minded, neither an apologist nor a scold, and he is a
wonderfully empathetic listener.”—The New York Times Book
Review
“Kapur’s strength is in letting his characters display the
ambiguity that many feel about the ongoing change. … Kapur offers a
corrective to a simplistic “new, happy narrative” of a rising
India.”—The Economist “There are many virtues of Akash Kapur’s
beautifully sketched portrait of modern India….The book inhabits
parts of India we do not explore often enough, the India of the
south and of the transforming countryside. Mostly, it takes us into
the minds and hearts of Indians seeking to adapt to a society
changing at disconcerting speed…. The book reads like a
novel…Kapur’s skill is to get people talking and to weave their
stories into a necessarily messy debate about India’s future.”—The
Financial Times
"Impressively lucid and searching . . . In his clarity, sympathy
and impeccably sculpted prose, Kapur often summons the spirit of
V.S. Naipaul." —Pico Iyer, Time
“Kapur himself, with one leg in the East and one in the West, is an
excellent ambassador to explain the dynamic of change in India,
what the nation is becoming. Any reader who would like to
understand the country better would do well to give him a
read.”—Daily Beast
"Kapur has a fluency that outsiders—even those of us with a genetic
tie—lack”—The New Republic
"This is a remarkably absorbing account of an India in transition -
full of challenges and contradictions, but also of expectations,
hope, and ultimately optimism."-Amartya Sen
"A wonderful writer: a courageously clear-eyed observer, an astute
listener, a masterful portraitist, and a gripping storyteller.
Kapur's voice is as sure and as intimate as his subject is chaotic
and immense, and he proves himself the perfect guide to the
enthralling promise and the terrifying menace of a society in the
throes of colossal, epochal, all-encompassing change."-Philip
Gourevitch, author of We Wish to Inform You That Tomorrow We
Will Be Killed With Your Families
"Marvelous . . . Kapur shows how the old rural cycle of the south
Indian village depicted and romanticized by R. K. Narayan is
fracturing and breaking apart to reveal a very new, more unstable
world where the old certainties are disappearing and everything is
up for grabs. Sharp-eyed, insightful, skillfully sketched and
beautifully written, India Becoming is the remarkable debut of a
distinctive new talent."-William Dalrymple, author of Nine Lives:
In Search of the Sacred in Modern India
"Akash Kapur lives in and writes out of an India that few writers
venture into. Curious, suspicious of received wisdom, and
intellectually resourceful, [Kapur is] one of the most reliable
observers of the New India."-Pankaj Mishra, author of Temptations
of the West: How to Be Modern in India, Pakistan, Tibet, and
Beyond
"Through a series of deft character sketches, Akash Kapur captures
the contradictions of life in modern India-between city and
country, technology and aesthetics, development and the
environment, greed and selflessness, individual fulfillment and
community obligation. His writing is fresh and vivid; his
perspective empathetic and appealingly non-judgmental."-Ramachandra
Guha, author of India after Gandhi
"Beautifully written . . . Akash Kapur celebrates the gains and
mourns the losses, conveying a complex story through the ups and
downs of the lives of some fascinating individual women and
men."-Kwame Anthony Appiah, author of Cosmopolitanism: Ethics in a
World of Strangers
"India today is in the midst of profound change and Akash Kapur
captures the impact of that change on the lives of ordinary Indians
with a narrative that avoids all clichés, platitudes, and
simplifications."-Gurcharan Das, author of India Unbound
“A fascinating look at the transformation of India, with broader
lessons on the upside and downside of progress.”—Booklist
(starred)
“[A] Lively, anecdotal look at the people who have been vastly
changed by the entrepreneurial explosion in India. . . . An honest,
conflicted glimpse of a country.”—Kirkus
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