![]() ![]() ![]() His reviews have been published in The Second Circle. ![]() Since The White Tiger, Aravind Adiga has written many online literary pieces and articles for The Financial Times. From a middle-aged Communist to an Islamic. Through the myriad and distinctive voices of its inhabitants, an entire Indian world comes vividly and unforgettably to life. The novel exhibits the lives of servants who serve businessmen in India and how a village illiterate goes on to become an entrepreneur. In his compelling new work of fiction, Aravind Adiga has imagined the small Indian city of Kittur, an everytown nestling on the coast south of Goa and north of Calicut. He often elaborates on the high and low points of the Indian economy and the possible effects that it has on middle class men. The White Tiger has earned him recognition and Adiga is now a well known person in the literary world, not only in India but overseas too. When he returned to India in December 2006, he rewrote the book entirely and completed the book in early January. 'Between the Assassinations' is a latticework of fourteen interrelated stories about the people of Kittur, a small town 'on India's southwestern coast, between Goa and Calicut.' The organizing principle of this book is the tourist guide, as each story begins with a walk through one of Kittur's distinctive neighborhoods, giving the reader a view. He began writing The White Tiger in 2005, but gave up midway. Aravind Adiga is best known for his novel The White Tiger that is a novel about the captivating economic scenario in India and has changed the perspective of people about the Indian Economy, with the birth of the character Balram and his life in the city of Delhi. ![]()
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