Author Novelist Poet Indian literature nut
The best books of 2023

This list is part of the best books of 2023.

We've asked 1,624 authors and super readers for their 3 favorite reads of the year.

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My favorite read in 2023…

Book cover of The Black Hill

Anjum Hasan Why did I love this book?

It would not be an exaggeration to say that I have never read a novel like this before, one that shows, in a dream-like language and imagery, two stunningly different worldviews colliding with strangeness and violence for the very first time.

Set in the middle of the 19th century in the dense forests, grand river valleys, and impassable mountains of the Eastern Himalayas, Black Hill manages to combine the experiences of a rebellious young woman belonging to a pre-literate, deeply instinctual and elemental culture, with the true story of a French priest trying to find his way through that forbidding landscape to carry the word of God to Tibet.

By Mamang Dai,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked The Black Hill as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

Set in the mid-nineteenth century, the action takes place in the Northeast-the region that spreads from Assam to Arunachal today. The East India Company is seeking to make inroads into the region and the local people-in particular the Abor and Mishmee tribes-fear their coming and are doing all they can to keep them out of their territories. The author takes a recorded historical event-the mysterious disappearance of a French priest, Father Nicolas Krick in the 1850s and the execution of Kajinsha from the Mishmee tribe for his murder-and woven a gripping, densely imagined work of fiction around it. And, even…


My 2nd favorite read in 2023…

Book cover of The Collector's Wife

Anjum Hasan Why did I love this book?

I am partial to any fiction set in my part of the world, the cultural hodgepodge called Northeast India. And Mitra Phukan is one of the region's best novelists.

Here, a bored and lonely college lecturer is washed up in a small town in Assam. With her husband often away on official duties, she quietly observes the mediocrity of the middle-class lives around her, even as the sectarian strife of the 1980s flickers in the background and then comes devastatingly close.

A slow-paced novel about violent change, hidden desires, and the strangeness of teaching canonical English literature in a setting far removed from it.

By Mitra Phukan,

Why should I read it?

1 author picked The Collector's Wife as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.

What is this book about?

This is the story of Rukmini who is married to the District Collector of a small town in Assam, and teaches English literature in the local college. On the surface, her life is settled and safe in the big, beautiful bungalow on the hill above the cremation ground, seemingly untouched by the toil and sufferings of the common folk living 'below'. And yet, each time there is an 'incident' in the district, the fear and uncertainty that grips the town finds a reflection in her own life. Assam is in the grip of insurgency and it is this thread that…


My 3rd favorite read in 2023…

Book cover of The Essential: U. R. Ananthamurthy

Anjum Hasan Why did I love this book?

I am drawn to writing on Indian literature and on being an Indian writer when it comes from novelists themselves rather than as an academic production.

UR Ananthamurthy belonged to both fields; he was a teacher of literature and a critic and also one of the big names of the generation of novelists born in the 1930s and 1940s.

This collection offers a fascinating range of ideas on how one might make oneself an Indian writer, how to tap into traditional sources, how not to make a monument of the past, and how to remain creative and rooted at the same time.

Plus, check out my book…

History's Angel

By Anjum Hasan,

Book cover of History's Angel

What is my book about?

Alif Mohammad is a middle-aged, mild-mannered school teacher of history, living at a time when Muslims are seen either as hapless victims or horrid threats. Alif is neither; he is a daydreamer who, when not taking his students around to gawp at the relics of Delhi’s past, is immersed in reveries on the country’s long centuries.

But the present is pressing down on him in the form of colleagues suspicious of too much history, landlords keen to police his eating habits, and the imam of the local mosque whom the God-loving but not necessarily God-fearing Alif is anxious to avoid.

This book is a darkly funny story about Indian life today and the challenge we all face: thwarting the bullies at the door.