1.
Duck of Destiny: Harry Potter: Tehelka Jul 23, 2005 ... But then, Harry Potter is so much more than a book – it’s a whole .... with Harry Potter, and I tend to relieve post-Potter-depression via ...
2.
Duck of Destiny: Thomas Abraham interview Jul 3, 2006 ... Thomas Abraham interview. Thomas Abraham is President and CEO of Penguin Books .... When I said the Duck of Destiny was a macguffin, I lied. ...
3.
Duck of Destiny: Indian children's literature and spec-fic ”Then again, there is a lot of very good fiction available for children, even if it is not by Indian authors. Having been a weird and withdrawn kid (and now ...
4.
Duck of Destiny: Comics, graphic novels and Indian speculative fiction of Virgin Comics and Animation, graphic novels have been in the Indian ... medium in India – on the one hand, literary graphic novels, and on the ...
5.
Duck of Destiny: Mary Anne Mohanraj interview Jul 3, 2006 ... Mary Anne Mohanraj is a writer born in Sri Lanka. She's actively involved in running SFF magazine Strange Horizons, DesiLit and the ...
6.
Duck of Destiny: IWE Spats: Tehelka Sep 3, 2005 ... To find nearly every uninteresting and exhausted IWE argument reiterated in The Observer a few days ago by William Dalrymple, ...
7.
Duck of Destiny: Mary Anne Mohanraj interview Jul 3, 2006 ... Mary Anne Mohanraj is a writer born in Sri Lanka. She's actively involved in running SFF magazine Strange Horizons, DesiLit and the ...
8.
Duck of Destiny: On thinness-related disorders: Hindustan Times Detective: Did you drop your clothes on purpose? Carol Gracias: No. Detective. Damn. I see you are a tough nut to crack. All right, then. ...
9.
Duck of Destiny: On thinness-related disorders: Hindustan Times ... not rival authors, but models and other celebrities with fake fast ... Here are the facts: Carol Gracias loses her top at the Lakme Fashion ... fact that they can’t put a flawless show or a flawless dress together, ... Carol: That’s your problem.
10.
Duck of Destiny: The South Asian diaspora and speculative fiction “Most South Asian/diaspora authors I encounter seem more concerned with writing mainstream 'literary' fiction. In part this is simply where their interests ...
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