Ajay is a Los Angeles-based journalist who worked as a staff correspondent for Asiaweek magazine in Hong Kong in the 1990s and in the New Delhi bureaus of The Associated Press and The Wall Street Journal Asia.
Iyer’s new memoir is a homage to Japan, a reminder of the impermanence of life, and having the courage to carry on in your autumn years. He poses the question: ‘How do we hold on to the things we love even though we know that we and they are dying?’
Author Helen Zia’s mother was among the many thousands who fled Shanghai after the communist revolution – the subject of her new book; in the US, where many ended up, they, like other East Asians, were seen by many as the enemy.
In memoir An Indefinite Sentence: A Personal History of Outlawed Love and Sex, Siddharth Dube lays bare the terror that dominates gay men’s lives in the country’s ‘homosocial’ society
Biography of Singapore prime minister dwells on his differences with predecessor Lee Kuan Yew, who disapproved of his ‘kinder and gentler’ governing style and gave him Machiavelli’s The Prince for some hints on how to lead.
Race is everything in America, unless you are white. In her first book, writer and editor Sharmila Sen argues that to level the playing field, whiteness must be acknowledged and its ‘magic cloak of invisibility’ removed.
Notwithstanding criticism author Roseann Lake has faced for her book’s failure to acknowledge a China scholar’s earlier work on the subject, Leftover in China is highly readable – and full of candid quotes from women unable to find mates
In 2016, Khan offered the soon-to-be president his pocket Constitution during a televised speech denouncing him; his book, ‘An American Family: A Memoir of Hope and Sacrifice’, offers insights into his experience of personal loss
Blaine Harden’s book King of Spies: The Dark Reign of America’s Spymaster in Korea narrates the story of Donald Nichols, an ‘American T.E. Lawrence’; implicated in torture and murder, he died in ignominy in a psychiatric hospital
The Booker Prize winner returns to fiction with The Ministry of Utmost Happiness, a story of religious and political violence full of lush prose but spoiled in places by expository detail that becomes overwhelming
In Zia Haider Rahman's debut novel, In the Light of What We Know, a young Oxford-educated Bangladeshi-born British human rights lawyer named only as Zafar befriends a colonel in the Pakistani army against the backdrop of the past decade's war in Afghanistan.
Love and suffering are so inextricably tied in the psyche of Vietnam that the nation's epic poem The Tale of Kieu revolves around a hero who is separated for years from his lover, but never stops dreaming of their reunion.
The opening line of The Accidental Apprentice, the third and latest novel by Vikas Swarup, reads: "In life you never get what you deserve: you get what you negotiate."
Ed Lin was born in New York City and raised in New Jersey and Pennsylvania, where his parents, immigrants from Taiwan and the mainland, owned small hotels.