Menu

Whispers from the Past

As the nation turns 66, Priya Gopal wonders if our celebrations of the Indian spirit of freedom are becoming perfunctory; a trip to the Andamans convinces her that we have begun to take for granted our lives, that many people sacrificed their lives for.

Review of ‘The Hope Factory’

THE LOUNGE| TURN OF THE PAGE In ‘The Hope Factory’, Lavanya Sankaran tells a poignant tale of modern urban India that juxtaposes modernity and tradition, affluence and poverty, but it lacks the punch that was delivered in her first anthology, says Deepa Padmanaban.

Spark – July 2013 Print Issue

Buy the July 2013 issue themed, ‘We, the people’ in print.

Spark – July 2013 Issue

At Spark this month, we decided to explore the human side of things—stir it up with people! Presenting to you, Spark’s July issue, themed ‘We, the People’! The issue is a mélange of interesting art, poetry, fiction and non-fiction and The Lounge segment chips in with something on spirituality and day-to-day life. We also have a lovely photo essay on the diversity in its peoples that India can proudly claim. We hope you enjoy this edition of Spark—we’ve been around for over three and a half years now, and we’re delighted that you’ve been a part of our wonderful journey. Click here to access the July 2013 issue on the ereader, ISSUU.

Landfill

While there is the constant cry of growing junk and garbage in the world around us, do we realise that there’s emotional garbage and pain piling up within us, humans? Ullas Marar writes a poem that makes us ponder over the darkness that fills our lives.

Glorious Diversity

Vinita Agrawal pays tribute to the glorious diversity of India through photographs that capture people from the west to the east.

The Shoe Millionaire

We fancy collecting different things but here’ someone who is different. Meet the ‘Shoe Millionaire’ in a work of flash fiction by Shikhandin.

Listen…

Loreto’s poem is about survivor’s guilt – a mental condition in which a person feels guilty for having survived when others have died. It summarises the longing of the protagonist to be in the company of a certain set of people who inspired him at some point but are now all dead. Here’s one facet of human nature.

The Creativity Principle

Was the splendid madness of creation engendered by a Creativity Principle millions of years ago? Tirna Sengupta ponders over creative extravagance and the various forms in which it manifests itself.