insider.si.edu: India, the definitive images : 1858 to the present / photo editor, Prashant Panjiar ; introduction, Khushwant Singh
India, the definitive images : 1858 to the present / photo editor, Prashant Panjiar ; introduction, Khushwant Singh
FILE - In this Dec. 20, 2010 file photo, Khushwant Singh, 96, talks sitting next to a fireplace in his house in New Delhi, India. Singh, a force in India's literary world for more than 60 years, has ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. FILE - In this Dec. 20, 2010 file photo, Khushwant Singh, 96, talks sitting next to a fireplace in his house in New Delhi, India.
NEW DELHI (AP) — Khushwant Singh, a journalist, editor and prolific writer whose work ranged from serious histories to joke collections to one of post-Independence India’s great novels, died Thursday ...
(Khushwant Singh adopted 15 August 1915 as his birthday, aligning it with India’s Independence Day, after his grandmother insisted he was born in August, though his father had enrolled him in school ...
As the calendar turned to , marking what would have been the 111th birthday of Khushwant Singh, the silence from his iconic Sujan Singh Park residence feels particularly loud. Singh ...
Khushwant Singh FKC (born Khushal Singh, 2 February 1915 – 20 March 2014) was an Indian author, lawyer, diplomat, journalist and politician. His experience in the 1947 Partition of India inspired him to write Train to Pakistan in 1956 (made into film in 1998), which became his most well-known novel. [1][2]
Khushwant Singh was a writer of postcolonial Indian literature known for his humorous yet unflinching treatment of such themes as the partition of India, social realism, and the peculiarities of human nature.