Month: March 2026

  • The Mighty Pauper – A review of Francis Wheen’s Book – Karl Marx: A Life 

    The Mighty Pauper – A review of Francis Wheen’s Book – Karl Marx: A Life 

    Like many other people who’ve changed the course of history, Marx lived a life of deep contradictions. Marx craved and was used-to the trappings of middle-class respectability, a decent house, a household that kept up appearances, the life of a Victorian gentleman-intellectual, and funded it entirely on Engels’s generosity, while remaining, in every other respect,…

  • On Giving Back

    On Giving Back

    by Bharat Chugh I have been thinking, lately, about luck. Someone defined it as the specific point where preparation meets opportunity. I have been thinking of opportunities. The opportunities I’ve been handed by this lottery called Life. And I’ve been thinking about my luck.   Not the abstract kind. The specific kind. The kind with…

  • The Library That Was My Storm and My Harbour

    The Library That Was My Storm and My Harbour

    Coming back from a matter today in Tis Hazari, I visited the Delhi Public Library today, after decades. This is where it all began for me. It’s 2003-2004, I had dropped out of school. I had to drop out of school. I knew I could do without the schooling but I still needed an education.…

  • Book Review : Hitler by Ian Kershaw

    Travels through Europe over the past several years have yielded experiences that are, in equal measure, enriching and deeply unsettling. The continent’s culture is extraordinary — its spires, cobblestone streets, bridges, lakes, mountain ranges, palaces, museums, and formal gardens speak to centuries of civilisational achievement. And yet, nestled within all of this, the horrors of…