Diksha Basu

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Diksha Basu


Born
Delhi, India
Twitter

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Diksha Basu is a writer and occasional actor.

Originally from New Delhi, India, she holds an MFA in Creative Writing from Columbia University and now divides her time between New York City and Mumbai.

Average rating: 3.45 · 11,506 ratings · 1,690 reviews · 5 distinct worksSimilar authors
The Windfall

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3.52 avg rating — 8,179 ratings — published 2017 — 21 editions
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Destination Wedding

3.28 avg rating — 3,300 ratings — published 2020 — 11 editions
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Opening Night

2.28 avg rating — 25 ratings — published 2011 — 5 editions
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Music of the Stars and othe...

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really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 2012
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The Wedding Party

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings
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More books by Diksha Basu…
Quotes by Diksha Basu  (?)
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“She was a daughter, a sister, and then a wife. But now her parents were dead—did that make her an orphan? Certainly not. Was there a specific age, she wondered, old enough, after which you were not considered an orphan if your parents died? Eighteen perhaps. And then her husband died—so she was a widow. But was there a certain age, young enough, that if you lost your husband you did not have to be called a widow? If a young childless woman lost her husband tragically when she was only twenty-five—or even thirty-seven, like Mrs. Ray had been—it felt unfair to burden her with the label of widow for the rest of her life. And Mrs. Ray certainly did not feel like a widow, even though she was reminded that she was one nearly every day in Mayur Palli.”
Diksha Basu, The Windfall

“Minal told her to always change her physical state when she needed to change her emotional state—“Stand if you’re sitting, sit if you’re standing, squat if you need to, do a push-up, a jumping jack, anything”
Diksha Basu, Destination Wedding

“Mr. Jha was learning that in this neighborhood, your guard was a direct representation of how much was worth guarding in your home. Guards with guns meant bricks of gold somewhere in the house. Maybe he would also get a guard with a gun, Mr. Jha thought; it would be cheaper than buying bricks of gold.”
Diksha Basu, The Windfall



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