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pranavisharma has been a member of Linktree for 2 years and joined in January 2024. The social media accounts linked to from pranavisharma are: • Instagram • X Besides social media accounts, pranavisharma has populated their site with: • ‘The ecological collapse is overwhelming, but observing something alive can counter it’: Neha Sinha • Why India is turning to slim non-fiction books - The Hindu • Khalid Jawed: “I keep saying that feeling is more important than understanding” | Hindustan Times • The Great Shamsuddin Family and the frivolity of being human | Hindustan Times • HT reviewer Pranavi Sharma picks her favourite read of 2025 | Hindustan Times • Review: Memories of Rain by Sunetra Gupta | Hindustan Times • Laszlo Krasznahorkai: The master of the apocalypse | Hindustan Times • Review: A Stone Thrown in a Pond edited by Ritu Menon | Hindustan Times • Review: One Boat by Jonathan Buckley | Hindustan Times • book review loal kashmir mehak jamal - The Hindu • Review: From the King’s Table to Street Food by Pushpesh Pant | Hindustan Times • Review: Life on Mars by Namita Gokhale • HT reviewer Pranavi Sharma picks her favourite read of 2024 • Review: Our Bones in Your Throat by Megha Rao • Review: How I Write by Sonia Faleiro • Review: The Anthropologists by Aysegul Savas • New India Abroad | Author Profile • Review of Sarah Perry’s Enlightenment, longlisted for the Booker Prize 2024 • Review of ‘All Fours’ by Miranda July • Booker Prize review: In ‘Held’, the moments of transcendence that bind us to one another • Review: The Vegetarian by Han Kang • Review: Playground by Richard Powers • Review of Booker Prize-shortlisted Creation Lake by Rachel Kushner • Review: The Safekeep by Yael Van Der Wouden • Review: A Man of Two Faces by Viet Tanh Nguyen • Priyanka Mattoo interview: ‘Losing someone over Kashmir was more painful, it affects everything’ • Review of ‘My Friends’ by Hisham Matar • 'Broken Threads' Book Review: Histories, personal and national • The Dream Machine Review • How bookshops in Delhi are reinventing themselves • Review: Parade by Rachel Cusk • A Way of ‘Happening’: Amitava Kumar’s THE YELLOW BOOK — The Chakkar • Review: How to Say Babylon by Safiya Sinclair • Jassa Ahluwalia interview: ‘None of us are half anything. We’re all whole, multiple beings’ • Martyr review • Alice Munro: A chronicler of the simple and the remarkable • Nightbloom review • ‘Kairos’ by Jenny Erpenbeck • Book review: Where God Began by Appadurai Muttulingam • Review: The Gallery by Manju Kapur • Paul Lynch Interview • Nehru presenting glimpses of history and of himself • Requiem in Raga Janki review: Portrait of an artist, who was stabbed 56 times • How Russian auteur Andrei Tarkovsky reflected on time, and faith in his films • Govind Nihalani's 'Party' • Jon Fosse: A deliberate embrace of unhurried prose: The Other Name • Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: How America misunderstood Islam, and the concept of jihad • The power of namelessness • Prophet Song review: This novel depicts how the end of the world is a local event • Study for Obedience review: An isolated woman’s unnerving tale of survival