Parth Pandya, a ‘foreign return’, is befuddled with driving on Indian roads.
Maids are an indispensable part of the Indian household. Anupama Krishnakumar’s story is about the equation a woman has shared with two maids at two different points in her life.
Rishitha Shetty writes a poem about Tiger Dancing, an important and much-celebrated tradition of coastal Karnataka.
Childhood is a time of exploration and coming to terms with adults’ norms. Anita N S writes a story that describes a child navigating the confusions of Indian society that both accepts and rejects a certain group of people.
Get set to go into the magical world of fiction with Spark’s July issue themed “Tell a Tale”! The issue has ten stories that will transport you to lives of people old, young, happy, confused, celebrated or rejected by the world around them.
Jan aspires to do something different in her life that would help her feel more human than she does now. Harnidh’s story is about Jan’s endeavours to achieve her motive.
A tyre becomes a barrier to Shreyas’s aspirations. How does the teenager surmount it? Parth’s story is sure to make you chuckle.
When Ami visits Madras after eight long months, her mother and sister have shifted from their old home to a new one. Shreya Ramachandran captures Ami’s longing for her old home and her feelings towards her new one.