Ana Huang’s King of Gluttony blends rivalry, longing, luxury, food, emotional baggage, and irresistible chemistry into a thoroughly entertaining romance. Sebastian Laurent and Maya Singh are fiery, stubborn, ambitious, and impossible to ignore together. This review explores the novel’s storytelling, characters, themes, humour, flaws, emotional tension, and why readers cannot stop obsessing over this addictive enemies to lovers romance. Do We Keep Falling for the Same Love Story in Different Expensive Clothes? There comes a point, after reading enough modern romance novels, when all the billionaires begin sounding like exhausted clones of each other. One owns hotels. Another owns vineyards. A third probably owns half of Manhattan and a private jet large enough to carry his emotional unavailability across continents. They all have tragic childhoods, sharp jawlines, and an alarming inability to communicate without staring intensely at walls. Somewhere in the middle of all this, a smart w...
Japanese literature is no longer a niche corner in Indian bookstores. In 2026, it has become a cultural wave. Readers exhausted by hustle culture are turning toward healing fiction, quiet café stories, and emotionally reflective Japanese novels. This article explores why Japanese books are rising rapidly in India, how publishers and anime fandoms fuel the trend, what risks exist, and why these stories feel deeply personal to Indian readers. Why are Indian readers suddenly buying so many Japanese books? A few months ago, a bookstore manager in Bengaluru noticed something odd about the customers crowding one particular table near the entrance. The stack was not filled with the usual commercial bestsellers. No mythology retellings. No productivity manifestos promising perfect mornings and billionaire habits. No celebrity memoirs. Instead, young readers were quietly picking up translated Japanese novels with understated covers and strangely gentle titles. What surprised him was not just th...