Tag: #theasianreview

Of Legacies and a Beheading

When this opportunity to visit Belgium came along, I couldn’t think of a better adventure than to make this ‘pilgrimage’ to Geel. It didn’t matter that I couldn’t enter the church since it was closed for the winter because what I came to see was on the outside – the bas-relief depicting the beheading of Dymphna. Wouldn’t it have been more apt if Damon was holding the chopped-off head of Dymphna? Just saying…

A Warm and Witty Return: Catherine Newman’s “Wreck” Delivers More of What Made “Sandwich” Irresistible

Catherine Newman’s “Wreck” brings back beloved narrator Rocky for a funnier, more poignant sequel. Facing a health scare and local tragedy in western Massachusetts, Rocky navigates family life with Nora Ephron-esque wit. Newman brilliantly blends domestic comedy with meditations on mortality, creating intelligent comfort reading that resonates deeply.

Saga of Devotion, Family Curses and Divine Hope From the Author of ‘Cutting for Stone

Verghese’s The Covenant of Water flows like Kerala’s monsoon rivers—patient, powerful, inevitable. Through three generations haunted by mysterious drownings, we discover how ancient wisdom meets modern medicine. This isn’t merely storytelling; it’s an immersion into lives connected by water’s eternal covenant, where individual sorrows merge into humanity’s greater current.

‘She, the island’

She looked at him, frozen. Everything stopped. There was only this moment when his hand slid down her neck, shoulders, chest, gently and tenderly followed her contours, wrapped her waist and pulled her close. Her body flared under the movement of his hand. She felt his lips, their butterfly touch.

You stole my youth

A haunting cry from the heart of oppression. María A. Perdomo’s powerful poem captures the anguish of a generation robbed of dreams, education, and hope. “You stole my youth” resonates with anyone who’s watched corruption destroy lives whilst those in power live in luxury.

Poetry Takes Centre Stage: Ethos Literary Festival Returns with Star-Studded Lineup” 

Ethos Literary Festival returns on 7th June 2025 at Ambassador Hotel, featuring prestigious book launches, interactive pitch sessions with leading literary agent Suhail Mathur, and ceremonial presentations by renowned professors. The day-long poetry celebration, organised by Harwal Publishers, concludes with the coveted Ethos Literary Award 2025 presentation ceremony.

My Life, My Text : Episode 12

Charu Nivedita is a South Indian Author. He has published six works of fiction, six works on cinema and numerous non-fiction. His novel Zero Degree was long listed for the 2013 edition of Jan Michalski Prize for Literature. It is a lipogrammatic novel in Tamil.

Global Internship Programme 2026: We’re Seeking University Students for Five Key Roles

We’re launching our inaugural global internship programme for 2026! University students worldwide can join us as moderators, reviewers, social media promoters, event curators, or editorial assistants. This fully remote, six-month programme offers invaluable literary publishing experience. Applications due 31st August 2025. Subject: “Internship 2026”. Join our literary journey!

Kenyan Literary Icon Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o Dies at 87

Kenyan author Ngũgĩ wa Thiong’o, who transformed African literature by writing in his native Gikuyu language, has died aged 87. The Nobel Prize contender, imprisoned and exiled for his political views, spent decades championing indigenous African voices. His revolutionary decision to abandon English challenged colonial literary dominance forever.

The Fierce Voice of Conscience: Arundhati Roy’s Literary and Political Revolution

Arundhati Roy exists as literature’s most uncompromising truth-teller, a writer whose pen serves simultaneously as artistic instrument and political weapon. Her singular career trajectory—from Booker Prize-winning novelist to fearless activist-essayist—represents one of contemporary literature’s most compelling arguments for the writer as public intellectual, refusing comfortable boundaries between art and politics.

The Asian Review Reaches Top Ranking as Asia’s Premier Literary Magazine

The Asian Review has achieved a remarkable milestone, ascending from 13th position in 2023 to 10th in Feedspot’s global literary magazine rankings. Competing amongst 2,500 publications worldwide, this achievement reflects genuine reader engagement from 40 million monthly visitors across 195 countries, establishing the magazine as Asia’s premier literary voice.

‘Annabel’

When she faced one of the original Sunflowers paintings, back in that distant summer, at that same museum, she had felt a surge of inexplicable tender joy, mixed with sadness. It had a pale yellow background and it was a copy of one of the first four versions that Van Gogh had painted in the summer of 1888 in Arles.

The Asian Review Sinhala Charts New Course with International Partnerships

As The Asian Review Sinhala prepares to enter this new phase on 1st June 2025, it stands as a testament to the enduring value of literature and the importance of community-driven cultural initiatives. In choosing independence and forging international partnerships, the publication is not merely ensuring its own sustainability but is actively contributing to the enrichment of Sri Lanka’s literary landscape.