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Barbara Walters' success was fueled by personal struggles, documentary director says

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment

Barbara Walters' success was fueled by personal struggles, documentary director says

Barbara Walters had a legendary 50-year broadcast career fueled in large part by the private struggles she faced behind the scenes, according to the director of a new documentary on her life. In the documentary, "Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything," the late journalist herself describes the struggles her family faced, particularly her father, Lou Walters, a nightclub impresario who owned the Latin Quarter, a club in New York City's Times Square. "My mother had no means of having a livelihood and my nightmare was that my father was going to lose it all," Barbara Walters, who died in 2022 at the age of 93, says in archival footage shown in the documentary. "He was a gambler by nature. He gambled on cards, and eventually he gambled on the Latin Quarter. And after years of success, he had nothing, nothing." She continued, "My father was in great despair, and he attempted suicide from an overdose of sleeping pills. I was in my 20s, and I had to support my whole family. I had to work at a time when many women of my generation were not working." Barbara Walters' forced responsibility of having to provide for her family -- which included an older sister with a disability -- was a pressure that led her to great professional success, according to Jackie Jesko, who directed "Barbara Walters Tell Me Everything." "Her dad goes riches to rags story, and then Barbara -- and this is at a time few women worked at all -- she becomes the breadwinner for the family, and I think that pressure really propels her for the rest of her life," Jesko said Wednesday on " Good Morning America." Jesko said she had 50 years of archival footage of Barbara Walters to draw from for the documentary, which begins streaming June 23 on Hulu and Hulu on Disney+. To begin to tell the story of the life of the trailblazing journalist, Jesko said she looked to Barbara Walters' own memoir, "Audition," as a blueprint. "Her own book, 'Audition,' was kind of our guide. I wanted to know what was important to her. What were the career highlights that really stood out to her?" Jesko said. "That was really, really helpful." Barbara Walters joined ABC News in 1976, becoming the first female anchor on an evening news program. Three years later, she became a co-host of "20/20," and in 1997, she launched "The View." In a career that spanned five decades, Walters won 12 Emmy Awards, 11 of those while at ABC News. She made her final appearance as a co-host of "The View" in 2014, but remained an executive producer of the show and continued to do some interviews and specials for ABC News.

Liv Morgan's life beyond WWE, from relationships to Hollywood ventures
Liv Morgan's life beyond WWE, from relationships to Hollywood ventures

Time of India

time6 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Time of India

Liv Morgan's life beyond WWE, from relationships to Hollywood ventures

Liv Morgan (Image via WWE) Liv Morgan might be a superstar in WWE , but there is much more to her life outside wrestling. From relationships to real estate, acting, and kindness, Liv is someone who follows her passions and stands up for what's right. She's not afraid to try new things and make a difference, all while staying true to herself. Let us take a look at what Liv is up to when she's not wrestling in the ring. Relationships of Liv Morgan When it comes to relationships, Liv prefers to keep her personal life private. Currently, Liv is single and is focusing on her wrestling career. In the past, there were rumors about her dating Tyler Bate and Bo Dallas , and her relationship with Enzo Amore was well-documented during their time in NXT. Liv is also involved in a dramatic on-screen relationship with Dominik Mysterio, although he is married in real life, adding some controversy and entertainment to her wrestling story. Liv Morgan's philanthropic and giving nature Liv Morgan focuses on social justice and helps organizations that support people in need, like the Minnesota Freedom Fund. Liv is also involved in fundraising for Cancer Research UK. She's a big supporter of the Make-A-Wish Foundation, where she helps make children's wishes come true. Additionally, Liv maintains a rigorous training regimen and a stylish lifestyle, reflecting her discipline and hard work, both in and out of the wrestling ring. According to Liv contributes to various initiatives across different industries, from beverage companies to casual dining and telecommunications. Liv Morgan's peaceful escape and real estate moves When Liv is not wrestling, she finds peace and happiness on her Florida farm, a place called Wonderland Ranch. This 7.25-acre ranch is home to a range of furry friends, including five chickens, two cows, a pig, two cats, and two dogs. Liv even maintains a wrestling ring in her workout space alongside a wrestling-themed walk-in closet filled with her gear, merchandise, and championship replicas. Tour WWE Star Liv Morgan's Florida Farm (Exclusive) Outside wrestling, Liv is making smart financial moves. She is currently pursuing her real estate license after enrolling in the Bob Hogue School of Real Estate in November 2020. Liv plans to start her own real estate brokerage and already owns a beautiful home in Orlando, Florida. The home includes a large pool, a well-equipped gym, and a garden, reflecting her sophisticated lifestyle. She's also made additional real estate investments, securing her financial future alongside her wrestling career. Liv Morgan's Hollywood adventure and entrepreneurial success One big step in Liv's career outside wrestling is her venture into acting. Liv is currently a part of the action thriller Bad Lieutenant: Tokyo. The film, directed by Takashi Miike, a renowned filmmaker known for Audition and 13 Assassins, is a sequel to the 1992 movie Bad Lieutenant. Liv plays a politician's daughter who is kidnapped in the story. The film, which also stars Shun Oguri and Lily James, started production in May under Neon Studios. Liv previously appeared in the TV series Chucky. Liv Morgan's Movie Role Finally Revealed! #wwe #shorts #livmorgan Liv Morgan, a WWE superstar, is also a smart businesswoman alongside her wrestling career. She owns a self-care beauty business called LiveMoreShop and is exploring real estate and acting. Her success in these ventures shows her popularity and the strong support from WWE. Also Read: Liv Morgan suffers legitimate injury on WWE RAW amidst huge upcoming feud

The 14 Best Books of 2025 So Far
The 14 Best Books of 2025 So Far

Time​ Magazine

time06-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time​ Magazine

The 14 Best Books of 2025 So Far

There's no better time than the start of summer to take a pause and reset your priorities. And, if we may be so bold, one of those priorities really should be to dig into one of the many great new books that have been published this year. It's only June, and yet we've already been blessed with a wealth of heart-rending memoirs, absorbing novels, and mind-expanding nonfiction. Meander through the beguiling mind of a theater actress, take a siblings road trip that challenges the very notion of family, or delve into a deep, personal secret. Here, the 14 best books of the year so far. The Antidote, Karen Russell It feels like the U.S. has lived 100 lifetimes since Karen Russell's much-lauded 2011 debut Swamplandia!, but it's safe to say that her highly anticipated follow-up The Antidote was worth the wait. An American epic that takes place in the 1930s in the fictional town of Uz, Neb., the story centers on a prairie witch who calls herself 'the Antidote.' A healer of sorts, the Antidote, like other prairie witches, is a keeper of others' thoughts—a memory vault who absorbs the heaviness of people's grief so they may have a chance at feeling lightness again. But when a dust bowl devastates the town, it takes the witch's memory deposits with it and leaves her fearful for her safety. What will happen to her when people can no longer unload their worst—and have to actually live with themselves? Told from the vantage point of multiple inhabitants of Uz, The Antidote is a sprawling yet meticulous story that implores us to see American history in its fullness, scars and all.— Rachel Sonis Audition, Katie Kitamura's taut and incisive follow-up to Intimacies, begins on a rich premise. The narrator, a successful actress navigating a difficult new role, goes to a Manhattan restaurant to meet a younger man, Xavier, who claims he's her son. It's impossible. The actress, who goes unnamed, has never given birth or been a parent. But the strange encounter isn't their last; Xavier begins working on the same play, and his bold assertion prompts her to unravel the many choices and performances that have brought her to this particular moment, on stage and in life. Halfway through, Audition changes realities, completely redefining the relationship between the two. Kitamura's tantalizing novel asks a lot of the reader, offering multiple versions of the same life that circle around an idea raised by the protagonist herself:'As you get older things become less clear.' —Mahita Gajanan In his second novel, Ocean Vuong sheds the epistolary conceit of his acclaimed debut, 2019's On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous. The result is a more sprawling yet direct coming-of-age tale animated by the specificity of its characters. When we meet 19-year-old Hai, he's standing ominously on a bridge in his depressed hometown of East Gladness, Conn. His first love is dead of a fentanyl overdose and his mom believes the flimsy lie that he's at medical school, leaving Hai with a craving for opioids and nowhere to go. Before he can do anything drastic, he's spotted by a dementia-stricken elderly woman, Grazina, who must sense his fundamental gentleness, because she says he can move into her place if he'll care for her. Along with his misfit coworkers at a fast-food joint, Grazina anchors the lost boy, even as her own mind drifts from its moorings. A premise that a lesser writer might churn into inspiration porn becomes, in Vuong's hands, a vivid, funny, emotionally realistic case study in the life-altering potential of community.— Judy Berman There are many debut novels about young people finding love and seeking purpose, but few are as perceptive about the connection between those pursuits as Naomi Xu Elegant's ruminative Gingko Season. Stubbornly fixated on a college boyfriend who broke her heart, 20-something narrator Penelope Lin works at a Philadelphia museum, pores over the city's history, and maintains a modest social life, largely disconnected from her family. When she meets a guy, Hoang, who has just confessed to freeing mice marked for death at the lab where he works, their excruciatingly slow-moving courtship pushes Penelope to think harder about her own principles and priorities. Elegant's writing is as unassuming as her heroine, yet the questions she raises about how to live with integrity in a compromised world can be startlingly profound.— Judy Berman The argument that flows from this book is simple: rivers, for all of the essential nutrients, biodiversity, and transportation possibilities they provide, deserve to be treated with the same respect as other living organisms. Robert Macfarlane visited three rivers, starting with the River of the Cedars in an Ecuadorian cloud forest, recently threatened by mining companies. He surveyed waterways in Chennai, India, which flood streets with crocodiles and catfish after cyclones. And he visited Mutehekau Shipu in Quebec, the first Canadian river to be given rights, including the right to be pollution-free. The author of Underland lends his expertise to raise awareness about a part of nature that is often taken for granted. Readers see that while rivers can be easily wounded, they can also quickly heal—if given the right care.— Olivia B. Waxman Ron Chernow, the author of the best-selling tomes Alexander Hamilton and Grant, offers a frank assessment of Mark Twain, the first major literary celebrity in the U.S. and a leading pundit of the Civil War era whose writings helped Americans make sense of life after slavery. While his novels The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn became classics, Twain made poor financial decisions that bankrupted him and forced him to flee the country and spend nearly a decade in exile. Chernow's biography gives the encyclopedic treatment to the writer, boasting about 1,200 pages based on his books, letters, and unpublished manuscripts. —Olivia B. Waxman In this dystopian speculative fiction novel, Vietnamese Americans are shipped to internment camps following a terrorist attack, with their civil rights and dignity stripped in the name of national security. While the premise could result in an overly dour or preachy book, Nguyen's novel zips forward with page-turning suspense, humor, and nuance. The book revolves around four half-siblings as they each confront difficult ethical choices and navigate their relationships with an oppressive state, cultural expectations, and each other. While parts of the novel are carefully grounded in history—especially in the experience of Japanese-American incarceration during World War II—the book also crackles with modern culture and proves gaspingly relevant in an era of division and heightened surveillance.— Andrew R. Chow At the center of Nicole Cuffy's O Sinners! is Faruq Zaidi, a Brooklyn-based journalist grieving the recent death of his devout Muslim father. After learning about a cult called 'the nameless,' whose followers abide by teachings like "create beauty" and "do not despair at death," Faruq—a skeptic who has felt disconnected from faith and religion since he was a teenager—travels to their compound in the California Redwoods to report a story. But as he grows closer to the group's inscrutable leader, a Black Vietnam War veteran called Odo, Faruq begins to question more than just the secret inner-workings of the cult itself. O Sinners! is driven by three alternating narratives: Faruq's present day work trip, Odo's tour of duty in Vietnam, and the screenplay of a documentary about a legal battle between the cult and a fundamentalist church in Texas. In weaving together these stories, Cuffy explores the varying shapes that grief, belief, and belonging can take. —Erin McMullen In late October 2023, Omar El Akkad started to outline his feelings about the war in Gaza, and how it feels to be a person unanchored from home. In his urgent nonfiction debut, the writer—who was born in Cairo, grew up in Doha, moved to Canada, and now lives in rural Oregon—wrestles with his disillusionment with the West and its institutions, particularly given the indifference he's observed in so many as the war rages on. This memoir-manifesto could be seen as hopeless, and there is certainly no shortage of carnage in its pages. But, in the determination of those standing up for their beliefs, El Akkad manages to find hope amid the fantasy of Western liberalism.— Meg Zukin In Kevin Wilson's latest novel, Mad spends her days working on a farm with her mom. She hasn't seen her dad in two decades and she's settled into a routine that's not particularly fulfilling, but she's made her peace with that. Then, a stranger appears at her front door and announces that he's her older half-brother, and that their father pulled a disappearing act on not just him and Mad, but other families too. He convinces her to join him on a cross-country road trip to round up their other siblings and find their father. What ensues is an often hilarious and sometimes devastating exploration of what really makes a family. Like Wilson's other fiction, including Nothing to See Here and Now Is Not the Time to Panic, Run for the Hills gently tugs at the heart.— Annabel Gutterman Sky Daddy is a love story, but one we're willing to bet is unlike any love story you've previously encountered. Drawing inspiration from Herman Melville's Moby Dick, Kate Folk's debut novel revolves around one woman's pursuit of her own white whale: finding her aircraft 'soulmate.' That's really the premise: our eccentric protagonist, Linda, wants to fall in love with a plane—and, in a morbid twist, she wants to 'consummate' that relationship by dying in an aviation accident. Linda is a San Francisco transplant who makes $20 an hour moderating hate comments for a video-sharing platform and devotes as much of that meager salary as possible to exploring the aircraft dating pool by catching flights. Linda is determined to keep her unusual proclivities a secret, but after her work friend, Karina, invites her to a monthly 'Vision Board Brunch' with some old college friends, Linda's attempts to manifest her idea of romantic bliss end up setting her on a path to radical self-acceptance. Sky Daddy is as poignant as it is bizarre— Megan McCluskey The Tell, Amy Griffin Rarely, if ever, has a book been endorsed by all three titans in the celebrity book club world—Oprah, Reese Witherspoon, and Jenna Bush Hager—but Amy Griffin's The Tell is no ordinary memoir. For readers of Tara Westover's Educated or Chanel Miller's Know My Name, The Tell is one of those deeply personal stories that manages to feel universal at the same time. Griffin was thriving as a businesswoman and happily married mother of four in New York City when a session with an MDMA therapist flooded her mind with long-buried memories. Suddenly, she remembered the sexual abuse she suffered at the hands of a teacher starting when she was 12 years old. Shattered and enraged, Griffin struggled to reconcile her past with her carefully constructed self-image and grappled with the weight of carrying such a harrowing secret. Her memoir retraces her steps through her private grief and isolating pursuit of justice, and, ultimately, her powerful realization that to tell is to heal.— Lucy Feldman After her teenage son James dies by suicide, Yiyun Li begins writing. It's what she knows how to do. The prolific author has, tragically, been in this position before. Her older son, Vincent, died by suicide in 2017. In her transcendent new book, she writes that she does not ruminate on grief, because to grieve suggests a process to which there is an end. She knows that to continue living is to accept that she will be a parent to her children for the rest of her life. In sparing prose that cuts deeply, Li examines the relationship between language and loss, honoring the sons who she carries with her, always.— Annabel Gutterman Emma Pattee's Tilt is an apocalyptic nightmare come to life. Annie is nine months pregnant and shopping at Ikea when Oregon is hit with 'the big one'—the earthquake that people in the Pacific Northwest have been anticipating for years. Pattee's thrilling debut tracks Annie's journey through rubble, chaos, hope, and despair as she searches for her husband amid the disaster. Tilt is a propulsive account of survival, and how humanity shows up under the pressure of a catastrophe. As she treks across Portland, Annie flashes back to moments that shed light on her life choices thus far. Her marriage and career are thrust under a microscope as she encounters others in crisis: the wounded, the searching, the lost, and the desperate. Best read in one sitting, Tilt is a raw examination of motherhood and its most extreme demands.— Meg Zukin

10 new books by Asian authors to read this AAPI month, from memoir to romance
10 new books by Asian authors to read this AAPI month, from memoir to romance

USA Today

time24-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • USA Today

10 new books by Asian authors to read this AAPI month, from memoir to romance

10 new books by Asian authors to read this AAPI month, from memoir to romance Every May, we celebrate Asian American and Pacific Islander communities, and that means it's the perfect time to read new titles by AAPI authors. Though this year's AAPI month comes amid the Trump administration's unrelenting offensive against diversity initiatives, film and media leaders continue to speak about the importance of representation. 'I'm DEI until I D-I-E,' said 'Never Have I Ever' star Poorna Jagannathan at this year's Gold Gala in Hollywood. And in publishing, diversity needs to be a priority at 'every level,' bestselling romance author Ana Huang told USA TODAY earlier this month. New releases by AAPI authors to read this AAPI Month From eerie dystopian to poignant memoirs and chance-encounter romances, this list of 2025 releases from Asian authors has something for every reader. Here's what we recommend: 'Saving Five' by Amanda Nguyen She's been in the headlines for more than just her time on the Blue Origin spaceflight this year. Astronaut Ngueyn's memoir tells the story of her activism in conversations with her younger selves, including when her life changed forever after she was raped at Harvard University in 2013. Her survival and advocacy led to Congress unanimously passing the Survivors' Bill of Rights Act of 2016. 'Time Loops & Meet Cutes' by Jackie Lau Reminiscent of 'Groundhog Day,' this romance novel finds a woman reliving the same Friday over and over again after she eats dumplings that are supposed to give her 'what she needed most.' To complicate matters more, she falls for a good-looking brewery owner who appears in multiple places in her repeating day, but not remembering her the next time it starts again. 'Dirty Kitchen' by Jill Damatac This memoir by filmmaker Damatac takes us through her time growing up in the U.S. as an undocumented immigrant, then traveling to her native Philippines and London to pursue an education at the University of Cambridge. 'Dirty Kitchen' combines colonial history, Indigenous tradition and Filipino cooking as Damatac searches for identity, tradition and comfort through food. 'The Girls of Good Fortune' by Kristina McMorris 'Sold on a Monday' author McMorris returns with a historical fiction novel about a woman disguised as a man who is 'shanghaied' – drugged and taken to an underground cell with the intent of being forced into labor. As she retraces her steps, she realizes how she got there, including a violent, anti-Chinese massacre that killed her father and the young daughter she left behind. 'Audition' by Katie Kitamura 'Audition' is a literary study of the performances and masks we put on for those who think they know us best. In it, an accomplished actress and an attractive younger man meet for lunch. Her husband walks in. The dynamic between the three is ambiguous, but as two parallel narratives unfurl, readers search for who this younger man is: Is he her long-lost son? Her lover? A yearning student? 'Spiral' by Bal Khabra The author of hockey romance novel "Collide" returns with another "Off the Ice" story. "Spiral" follows Toronto Thunder hockey player and paparazzi magnet Elias Westbrook and Sage Beaumont, an aspiring ballerina. A fake relationship might just be what Sage needs for her shot in the spotlight and what Elias needs to get the tabloids off his back. 'Mỹ Documents' by Kevin Nguyen 'Mỹ Documents" is a timely and important dystopian novel about four young half-siblings whose paths diverge when the government begins forcibly detaining Vietnamese Americans. While two siblings are interned and forced to work, cut off from the outside world, the other two are exempt and work to expose the horrors of the camps. 'We Do Not Part' by Han Kang The author of the Booker Prize-winning 'The Vegetarian' returns with the story of two friends during a reckoning with a period of hidden Korean history. Kyungha receives an urgent message from her friend Inseon that she's been injured in an accident and begs Kyungha to save her pet while she's hospitalized. Kyungha gets caught in a terrible, blinding snowstorm, arriving at Inseon's house only to realize there's something even darker awaiting. 'Vera Wong's Unsolicited Guide to Snooping (on a Dead Man)' by Jesse Q. Sutanto If you loved Sutanto's first Vera Wong mystery, check out the anticipated sequel. The meddling teahouse owner is feeling a bit bored after her high-stakes investigation into a murder in her shop, but then a chance encounter with a distressed young woman leads her to another rookie investigation into the death of an enigmatic influencer. 'When Devils Sing' by Xan Kaur (out May 27) This YA Southern Gothic horror novel follows four unlikely allies investigating a local teen's disappearance. As Neera, Isaiah, Reid and Sam investigate Dawson Sumter's bloody disappearance, they uncover that the nearby rich community may be harboring a power that connects to an ancient urban legend about three devils. 15 books to read this summer: Most anticipated releases for 2025's hottest months Clare Mulroy is USA TODAY's Books Reporter, where she covers buzzy releases, chats with authors and dives into the culture of reading. Find her on Instagram, subscribe to our weekly Books newsletter or tell her what you're reading at cmulroy@ Contributing: KiMi Robinson

Literary Rehab: How to balance Life with Lit
Literary Rehab: How to balance Life with Lit

Hindustan Times

time18-05-2025

  • General
  • Hindustan Times

Literary Rehab: How to balance Life with Lit

Dear Reader, This is my week of non-reading. I've been forced into literary rehab. As someone who spends all their free time between the pages of a book, this is pure torture. The only times I haven't read were when I was forbidden to —maybe there were exams, or maybe my mother decreed I was straining my eyes too much. Even then, there were always inventive ways around the ban: reading a Five Find-Outers mystery between my science textbooks or reading Gone with the Wind under the sheets. But now, even I know it's time to stop reading. I've returned to Mumbai to a house filled with cartons that need unpacking, a desk cluttered with unpaid invoices, and chaos in every corner. I have a week to fix it all before leaving again. The writing is on the wall: I need to stop reading—even my to-be-read list. Sonya, don't look at Audition by Katie Kitamura, never mind that your book club is reading it. Or How to Kill Your Family by Bella Mackie, by your bedside after your girls recommended it as riveting. Or Fasting—no, you can't call it 'health research.' and pretend that's not reading. Sonya, read the writing on the wall. Stop Reading. My friends say, 'You read so much!' like it's a virtue. (The truth? I've long disguised my escapist addiction as self-improvement. My notebooks are plastered with lofty quotes: 'Reading fiction allows us to explore the depths of our own emotions, question the world around us' 'Readers are leaders,' etc. All true—but did those wise souls mean for me to neglect life entirely?) I skim from story to story, drunk on make-believe. Monday: Chinese spies in The Hidden Hand by Stella Rimington. Tuesday: Shanghai murder mysteries. Wednesday: Nigerian sci-fi in Death of the Author. Friday: House of Huawei. And on the weekend, real life scams in Empire of Pain and The Everything War. Sounds perfectly bookish I know. Except that at this point, between you and me, and strictly off the record - it's time to stop. My binge-reading has left me mired in a mountainous mess. And it's just a week of not reading—how bad could it be? Plus I've done it once before. Six years ago, following Julia Cameron's The Artist's Way program, I was forced to quit all reading as part of the course. For a whole week ! The first days were hell—what to do in queues, waiting rooms or winding down before bed? But slowly, I re-learned to play the piano, sketched, even tidied drawers. Shockingly, not reading had unexpected perks. Also Read | Book Box | Reading without rules Now on Day 1 of literary detox, I clear my desk, my cupboard and my hard drive. Afterwards, I slump onto my reading spot (red cushion, propped pillows) with no soothing prospect of a book before me. Instead I stare into space, at my walls full of bookshelves, and wonder: Did I always read this much? At 21, studying at IIM Calcutta, I barely touched novels—just MBA notes. Work life weekends in Mumbai revived my habit. Motherhood pared reading down to Saki and Maugham short stories, read in bits between baby cries. Now, with grown kids, I read 100+ books a year, and binge on book clubs. This week is different. With no books to gobble my attention, I discover life beyond the pages. I sit about more, I day dream. The girls and I go buy flowers, we go hunting for light fixtures. I make mango ice cream, egg sandwiches and homemade mustard. I write more. I start writing a screenplay. I also end up irritating my family ! Suddenly I am noticing all their little misdeeds and their messes. Go back to your murder mysteries, they beg me. As the week draws to a close, I am strangely content. This literary detox feels like a palate cleanser, like breathing in the scent of coffee beans between glasses of wine. I am more intentional and more mindful about my reading life. I shift away from the latest bestsellers and decide to begin a long planned project - re-reading old classics, beginning with The Brothers Karamazov. It feels like this break - even from a good habit - has sparked creativity in me, and given me more focus. Going back to reading is amazing - for reading is magic—it deepens our empathy, stretches our imagination, and connects us to lives we'll never live. But I realise there's another kind of magic too: unhurried conversations, homemade mustard, swimming with your daughters, noticing the shape of your day. The best stories aren't just the ones you read—they are also the ones you pause long enough to live. (Sonya Dutta Choudhury is a Mumbai-based journalist and the founder of Sonya's Book Box, a bespoke book service. Each week, she brings you specially curated books to give you an immersive understanding of people and places. If you have any reading recommendations or suggestions, write to her at sonyasbookbox@ The views expressed are personal.)

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