Tara meets someone through a matrimony broker. They quickly decide marriage isn’t on the table, but spend a night together anyway. What follows isn’t regret or drama, but an unsettling emptiness. Over tea and samosas, she tries to understand why physical closeness left her feeling more alone than before. Spill the Tea: When Closeness leaves You Feeling Further away The tea was too sweet. Tara noticed it immediately but didn’t say anything. She sat on the verandah chair, one foot tucked under the other, the plastic creaking every time she shifted. She wore a black cotton top with sleeves pushed to her elbows and denim shorts that left her knees bare to the evening air. She didn’t look uncomfortable. Just slightly unfinished, as if she’d left in a hurry. Between us, a steel plate held two samosas, already cooling. The chutney had begun to darken at the edges. She broke a corner of the samosa. The crust flaked onto her plate. She dipped it into the chutney, carefully. “You know,” she said...
How do forgotten battles shape a nation’s memory? A Critical Review of The Battle of Narnaul Why do some freedom fighters become household names while others survive only on flyovers and forgotten footnotes? This detailed, non partisan review of The Battle of Narnaul examines a neglected uprising of 1857, its heroes, its unity, and why this book quietly reshapes how you understand resistance, memory, and history itself. Why does Indian history remember roads better than rebels? Have you ever driven past a flyover named after someone you know nothing about and wondered who that person was? You might have crossed the Rao Tula Ram Flyover in Delhi, cursed the traffic, and moved on. That moment says more about how we treat history than we admit. Names survive. Stories do not. The Battle of Narnaul by Kulpreet Yadav and Madhur Rao arrives precisely at that uncomfortable intersection. It asks you to pause, not out of nostalgia, but out of responsibility. This i...