
In conversation with Janice Pariat. Free to attend. No registration required.
April 26, 5 pm
Quill and Canvas
122 South Point mall
Golf Course Road
DLF 5, Sector 53

In conversation with Janice Pariat. Free to attend. No registration required.
April 26, 5 pm
Quill and Canvas
122 South Point mall
Golf Course Road
DLF 5, Sector 53
Writespace is pleased to invite you to a very special virtual event, Derek Niemann in conversation with Ondaatje prize-winning author, Rahul Bhattacharya, on his remarkable new novel, Railsong on 2nd May, 3pm (UK).
With its blend of grit, humour, tenderness and historical force, Railsong offers a vivid portrait of one woman’s determination and of a country in motion.
Bhattacharya will join Niemann for what promises to be a rich and compelling discussion about fiction, history, character, and the making of a truly memorable novel.
Open to all. Please RSVP by 28 April 2026, via email (writein@writespace.ink).


Literary Talk | Literature meets the railways at the next Goethe Darbaar, as railwomen take centre stage.
Writer Rahul Bhattacharya and former railway officer Smriti Verma explore the stories, struggles, and systems that define India’s railways. Moderated by Shrayana Bhattacharya, this session promises a rich and layered exploration of gender, labour, and storytelling within the railways
Penning the Paradox: Imagining her World
In conversation with Jonathan Gil Harris and Devapriya Roy
March 15, 4-4.45 pm
Kiran Nadar Museum of Art, Saket
‘We’ve become accustomed, maybe even resigned, to the long wait for big, new novels from our favorite authors. Kiran Desai’s The Loneliness of Sonia and Sunny, at nearly seven hundred pages, was a sensation when it came out last fall, almost twenty years after her 2006 Booker Prize–winning The Inheritance of Loss. Rohinton Mistry, that great chronicler of Bombay, hasn’t published anything since his 2002 magnum opus, Family Matters. We can only hope there’s a new book on the horizon soon.
‘Rahul Bhattacharya, meanwhile, a journalist and cricket writer raised in Bombay, wowed readers with his 2011 debut, The Sly Company of People Who Care, a sly, audacious excursion into the interior of Guyana. It was a revelation, alive to the rhythms and mysteries of the country’s landscape, history, and people. Now, fifteen years later, Bhattacharya has returned with a follow-up just as astonishing and enigmatic. Railsong (Bloomsbury, 2026) is a sprawling, rhapsodic ode to a changing India in the final decades of the twentieth century, seen through the eyes of Charu Chitol, who from an early age is enraptured by India’s “great railway system whose railsong plucks at our souls no less musically than a sitar string.”

‘Because it is the Indian Railways that makes India.’ When I have a loquacious personnel officer declare this in my novel, Railsong, I am tapping into an idea as old as the railways in India …
A piece on a few (of many) favourites for the Wall Street Journal’s Five Best series

12:00 – 13:00
Sumana Ramanan in conversation with Rahul Bhattacharya
INDIRA MIRI HALL
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15:30 – 16:30
Ravinder Singh engages with Ruchir Joshi, Rahul Bhattacharya and Sandeep Khanna on their novels
CMS 1
A conversation with students at the Ashoka University about writing
Feb 14, Shanghavi Library, 7.45pm