So what should you read this weekend?

Wondering what book would be ideal for the weekend? Here is our list:

1. Book: Of Marriageable Age; Author: Sharon Maas; Publisher: FingerPrint; Pages: 520; Price: Rs.350

This is a tale of three protagonists and a story of their forbidden love spanning three continents and three decades. Sharon Maas's novel, set against the Independence struggles of two British colonies, India and British Guiana, depicts the lives of Savitri - a posessor of magical healing power during the Raj; Natraj, an orphan adopted by a British physician in London, and Saroj, a rebellious girl growing up in British Guiana. As the chapters unfold, the novel reveals how each character's story weaves into the others and comes together.

2. Book: Let The Reason Be Love; Author: Tuhin Sinha; Publisher: Rupa; Pages: 214; Price: Rs 176

Tuhin A. Sinha's third book is written in an impassioned and disturbingly honest narrative style - two strangers falling in love and the topsy-turvy turns that follow thereafter. Protagonist Rishaan and Kiara, recovering from their respective heartbreaks, find solace in each other. But things fall apart when Kiara proposes to Rishaan, who realises that it is Kiara's best friend that he has actually fallen for.

3. Book: Asian Absences; Author: Wolfgang Buscher; Publisher: Speaking Tiger; Pages: 147; Price: Rs 350

German journalist Wolfgan Busher has captured the conflicting emotional and intellectual responses of a stranger travelling in the East. The book is a contemplative and lyrical narrative of his travels across Cambodia, India, Japan, Nepal and Singapore. The book is a subtle and compelling investigation into the perils and rewards of coming out of the comfort zone and travelling to unknown lands.

4. Book: The Light of his Clan; Author: Chetan Raj Shrestha; Publisher: Speaking Tiger; Pages: 267; Price: Rs 399

The book revolves round the life of the main protagonist, Kuldeep Chandanath, an ex-minister in Sikkim, and his sons who refuse to carry forward his life's work. The book, set against the background of Gangtok, is funny, compassionate, wise and full of memorable characters.

(With agency inputs)