My latest book is The One Who Swam With The Fishes.

"A mesmerizing account of the well-known story of Matsyagandha ... and her transformation from fisherman’s daughter to Satyavati, Santanu’s royal consort and the Mother/Progenitor of the Kuru clan." - Hindustan Times

"Themes of fate, morality and power overlay a subtle and essential feminism to make this lyrical book a must-read. If this is Madhavan’s first book in the Girls from the Mahabharata series, there is much to look forward to in the months to come." - Open Magazine

"A gleeful dollop of Blytonian magic ... Reddy Madhavan is also able to tackle some fairly sensitive subjects such as identity, the love of and karmic ties with parents, adoption, the first sexual encounter, loneliness, and my favourite, feminist rage." - Scroll



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30 April 2021

Today in Photo


Wish I could sleep this blissfully. #catstagram #catsofdelhi #brunothetabby

via Instagram

28 April 2021

The Internet Personified: Second Wave

I hate that this painting from 1562 feels so current

Hello,

I just wanted to write you a note, since you haven’t heard from me in a while, to let you know I’m okay. Shit is bad here, you’ve no doubt heard how bad things are or are living it so what can I say to add to that?

K thinks it’s dumb, me writing to you: “Are you going to say, ‘Hiiii Substack People, just wanted to let you know I haven’t died yet?’” “Basically, yes,” I say. I have friends who have COVID, some for the second time, I message them every morning, “Hello, just checking in.” We’re all saying, “Please don’t die yet.” I hear from friends around the world, “You guys ok?” (Please don’t die yet.)

But in our very own personal world, we are only locked in. We haven’t left our house in so long we didn’t know that our first floor neighbour had been taken to the hospital or that us, and the people directly below us, were the only people left in the building. I found this out when our downstairs neighbour—a doctor—called me yesterday because she could smell gas. “It’s not from our house,” I assured her, “Have you checked with the other houses?” And she laughed, lightly, grimly, “There’s no one else in the building.”


There was this “we’re in this together” feeling of the first lockdown, which is absent now. Everyone is hunkering down, staying in, but this time no Facebook groups about recipes are popping up, no reading recommendations or movie dates suggested. Instead, all across social media, there’s calls for help, “URGENT SOS PLEASE HELP ME NEED OXYGEN.” It’s like being attacked, you can’t think of anything else, so you doom scroll and retweet when you can, and say angry things about Modi and the government when your rage pushes you to the brink, but mostly you’re holding your breath, let today be the day disaster sidesteps me. Repeat as needed, which is every morning, when I reach for my phone and check my WhatsApp messages first, ok, ok, everyone’s good, everyone’s fine, I can get out of bed now, and make jokes about things for a little while, until boom, once more I am sucked in for the day into articles about how many people are dying and how bad this is and then panic once more.


I’m actually a little surprised when I get my period. Like, “oh, this is still happening?”


Some people are using their time online to help other people. I wish I could be like them. I feel guilty for reading so much, for pretending like the outside world doesn’t exist, and the guiltier I feel, the more I read. I stress-shopped for a bunch of used books off BookChor. I’ve just (re)discovered Louise Penny and adored Willa Cather. I’m snatching books off my shelves that I’ve never managed to read before. I can’t write, putting one word in front of another is hard, and I’ve had to write for work, but I can read, faster than I have before, burrowing like a mole into the pages so no one can get me.

They should call them bookmoles not worms.


There should be a word for the feeling you have watching your friends and family live perfectly normal everyday lives in a country that isn’t India. You’re jealous but you’re also glad for them and you’re also sad for yourself and everyone else here with you. If wishes were teleportation devices, you’d be so far away right now. Then the guilt again.


I wonder if we’ll be able to get registered for the vaccine today or whether the supplies will run out so fast we won’t even see them and should we be getting vaccinated when there are people who need it more but shouldn’t we be getting vaccinated because everyone who does is stronger against this invisible beast?


Please stay home if you can. Please wear a mask. Please open your windows if you have someone else in the house besides the people who live there. If you don’t live in India, learn from us: how a country can get so smug that they declare the pandemic over and do all sorts of foolish and highly irresponsible things and here we are again. If you can get vaccinated, please do. If you’re bored, remember how much worse the alternative is.

I love you all, please stay safe.


I read a bunch on the internet, both pandemic and non-pandemic, which might distract you as they did me, so I’m including them here, but you don’t have to look at them if you don’t have the bandwidth.

Pandemic:

How the Kumbh Mela wasn’t supposed to happen at all this year but astrology.

Liberalising vaccine sales may block access to millions of people in India.

Affluent Indians were the COVID superspreaders.

Interview with a cremator.

UK’s COVID deniers.

(Please consider donating to keep journalism like Scroll and The Wire free and able to pay their reporters for all the excellent work they’re doing.)

Non-pandemic:

Excellent essay on chess players in Chennai.

I also liked this, from Fifty Two: the history of India’s LGBT couples.

Related: why the UK is so TERF-y.

Staying with the Hadza tribe.

The problem with designer dogs.

Photo essay: how rideshare apps have changed the lives of Indian women.

These are terrible times, friends, but I hope we’ll all come out of it together.

xx

m

Where am I? The Internet Personified! A mostly weekly collection of things I did/thought/read/saw that week.

Who are you? Meenakshi Reddy Madhavan, writer of internet words (and other things) author of seven books (support me by buying a book!) and general city-potter-er.

Follow me on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. (Plus my book recommendation Instagram!)

Got sent this newsletter? Sign up here to subscribe!

Forward to your friends if you liked this and to the influencers insisting we “stay positive and stop spreading negativity” if you didn’t.

Also, write back to me! I love to hear from you.

26 April 2021

What I'm Reading


I am rubbish at keeping a schedule for this thing but you know, it's been a WEEK and I'm sure everyone is as distracted as I am. I'll share more kids books later this week but I've also been reading some fun things while I retreat into my bookshelf and pull the covers over my head, trying to pretend like the outside world isn't happening. One of those books is My Antonia by Willa Catcher, an American classic I'd been avoiding until very recently but you know, I'm glad I read it now, not when I was much younger. It came to me at exactly the right time I think. Up until now my only experience with America's pioneers was Laura Ingalls Wilder who I madly adore and who aroused an interest in me for how people got on in that strange and interesting time. My Antonia is about settlers, a Bohemian family who moves in next door to our narrator, a young boy and the trials and tribulations of Antonia, the oldest girl. It's not a sad book, it's actually quite a happy book, but sad things do happen. Mostly I loved the descriptions of friendship and quiet camaraderie between the two as they walk across the vast prairie together. A lovely book. #bookstagram #mrmbookclub #121in2021 #myantonia #willacather

23 April 2021

Today in Photo


Black and grey mornings. Have had to deny cats terrace access till they finish up next door and we can net it properly but every now and then we feel bad for them and let them scamper about. Here's Squishy, surveying. #catsofinstagram #squishytheblackcat #catsofdelhi

via Instagram

20 April 2021

What I'm Reading


People never talk about this book when you ask for recs about a childhood in a small town in India. It's all "Swami and Friends this or Ruskin Bond that" and it is a SHAME, friends, because I love Rohit Manchanda's book so much, this is actually my second copy, having read the first to pieces In The Light Of The Black Sun fits my #kidsbookweek because it is a book about childhood as seen through the eyes of young Vipul in Khajoori, a coal mining town where his father is a manager. Vipul tries to grow taller through yoga, battles for how many mosquitoes he can kill, discovers the BBC World Service as well as the sexy dancer at his local Ram Leela and all told with this super authentic voice that makes you feel like you were there, even if at the time you first read it, you were a teenage girl in Delhi. I am very sad it is not more widely known and so this is my way of making this book a thing. I suspect it's out of print and I'm hoping @penguinindia will see this post and instantly make it available for us all again. This is truly a modern classic. #bookstagram #mrmbookclub #rohitmanchanda #mino #inthelightoftheblacksun

Today in Photo


Second lockdown hair and filter experiments. #delhidiary #mickeymouseears

via Instagram

19 April 2021

What I'm Reading


In an attempt to distract myself from all the disasters happening in this country at this moment, I'm declaring it Children's Book Week on this page and every day for the next week, I will post a favourite kids book. I love children's books so much, I reread all mine frequently and constantly as an adult, so this week is also a celebration for people like us: Grown Ups Who Like Kids' Books. All of these are also very fun to reread now but they may not always be super easy to get as a lot of mine are out of print. Not this one though! Even though I still haven't found book two of Eve Garnett's delightful adventures of the Ruggles family, I've read book one (this one) and book three (Holiday At The Dew Drop Inn) enough to fill in the gaps. The Ruggles children age from Lily Rose, the oldest, about 13, all the way down to baby William, but we are mainly concerned with the oldest four children, two girls, two boys (twins.) They're not rich, Mrs Ruggles is a washerwoman, her husband is a garbage collector and Garnett wrote these books to illustrate how poor children lived, and yet, they're not grim or sad. Instead there's an abundance of adventures and a lot of love, so you feel safe and comforted by the books in the best possible way. RIYL stories about large families, small towns in England. #minnareadschildrensbooks #kidsbookweek #bookstagram #mrmbookclub #evegarnett #thefamilyononeendstreet

16 April 2021

Today in Photo


Fish mask for fish eyes. A beautiful present from @nailajung #maskup #madhubani

via Instagram

13 April 2021

Today in Photo


The language of love. I have a tummy ache. I say wistfully that I wish I had some curd rice the way my mum made it, I suppose I could order it in, I don't feel like I have the energy to cook it. He asks me how to do it, step by step. He creates it for me. I feel nourished both by the simple meal that's gentle on my insides and by this gesture. Better than red roses! Yesterday he made it again and this time we had to photograph how beautiful it looked. He's better at the curd rice than I am, it tastes just like my childhood. We used to pack it for long train journeys and eat it off steel plates. A recipe, if you want one: mix a cup of rice with a cup of curd, both cold, add salt and let rest. In a small tadka pan fry lots of garlic chopped small and mustard seeds. When the garlic browns, add karipatta and two slit green chillis, turn off the flame, pour over your rice and dahi and mix. Serve with your favourite pickle on the side. My trick is to not add too much curd, you want the rice to be sticky but not wet. #memories #curdrice

via Instagram

12 April 2021

What I'm Reading


Yes, yes, Kipling is super colonial and there's a certain amount of 🙄 when he talks about the "natives" vs the "good white men" who took over this country. Kipling supported the British rule of India like someone who truly believed in it, mixed into his mother's milk or something. But, but. In these stories, mostly stories of love, there's a point of view given to the Indians who waited on the British, a sympathy, an idea of them as people that I find lacking in his contemporaries. Also this is an India I seldom read about, the days of the Raj, that isn't just beautiful women and soldiers against the background of India as it were. India is in these stories as alive as any of its characters, which I think is his great gift. Have you read The Jungle Books? Actually read them, not just watched the Disney versions? They're among my favourite books of all time, and while some of these stories are a little trite, they still offer the same joy of sharp observation and keen wit. #bookstagram #mrmbookclub #121in2021 #rudyardkipling #plaintalesfromthehills

10 April 2021

What I'm Reading


I've already mentioned my great love for Anne Tyler so talking about one of her books again seems redundant but I enjoyed this so much. It's a bit of a departure for Tyler, first person, the narrator is a man who was troubled in his youth and now, in his adulthood works at a company that does errands for the elderly. I loved it for its meditations on old age, which will come to all of us eventually. Maybe because the life I'm living now is an old person's life. I barely leave my house. I have small interests like reading or jigsaw puzzles. I have a routine I stick to. I feel my thirty ninth year slipping through my fingers as much as thirty eight did. I have a milestone birthday this year, perhaps that's what sending me down these paths. Forty isn't seventy but this isn't how I thought I'd be spending the last few months of my thirties either. Anyway, I loved this book. Compulsively readable like all of Tyler's, but different, harder, less gentle. I think you'll like it. #bookstagram #mrmbookclub #121in2021 #annetyler #apatchworkplanet

9 April 2021

Today in Photo


The beautiful banyan tree next to my mother's apartment. Which reminds me of this guy I met once in Goa who told us he had a tree. "You have a tree?" I asked and he said, "Yes, there's this banyan tree I found and I want to make it a Thing." and sure enough, a few months later, there was a gig around the tree and burgers and cheap red wine. I miss Goa when I think of banyan trees, there were so many in the neighbourhood we briefly called home. #banyan #treesofdelhi

via Instagram

6 April 2021

Today in Photo


The construction next door is depressing me, after four years of having a lovely view and peace and quiet, it's being taken away by a large builder's flat style building and I can't help resenting everyone involved including our future neighbours. But then I think at least I had this past year to actually enjoy being at home because I couldn't leave it. There's silver linings in (almost) everything if you look and I continue to be a relentless optimist. Here's some shadow puppets tonight banging and spitting away on the other side of this green screen. I'm angry but I'm helpless so I may as well let it go. #delhidiary

via Instagram

The Internet Personified: Americana

Christina’s World by Andrew Newell Wyeth

Most Esteemed Painted Storks,

There was a period in the ‘90s where everyone’s summer holiday seemed to be set in stone. You’d ask your classmate what they were doing over the break and they’d casually mention either going to see a Chacha Abroad or having Abroad Chacha come and see them. You’d nod wisely, you too had similar plans that holiday, one or the other of your family’s NRI relatives would be coming to visit, coming to stay, and that would occupy much of your time, between taking them out and showing them things or eating at restaurants they missed or even going on regular summer road trips to Agra or Jaipur, staring at the beautiful monuments that had grown so monotonous for you, you swear you could recite the guide’s patter by heart every time you turned a corner of the Taj Mahal.

Depending on where you were from, that’s where your foreign returned guests would be from in correlation. The Reddys, my mother’s family, tended towards the States so firmly, like a tree grown slanting towards the sun, that it shocked me later that other people could live in other places that weren’t either India or “somewhere in America.” On my father’s side, I only know my uncle and aunt and two cousins who live in London but they moved around a lot, so London never came up in my imaginings as much as the US did. Ours was a close familial relationship broken in two halves: my mother and one of her sisters stayed in India, their two older sisters emigrated to America in their 20s and raised American children with strong Hyderabadi roots.

In my extended family, America was #GOALS. It was expected that we would all one day wind up there, whether by education or work. Surprisingly, apart from the actual Americans, my cousins and their parents, none of us made the move, choosing India instead. But then India also evolved in ways we couldn’t have foretold when America was being held up in front of us as the only way to live a good life. If you are a certain kind of Indian (rich, I mean, and relatively rich, I mean, in comparision to everyone else, and upper caste and class which is also something you should think about) then you can have a better life here than you would in America with your same circumstances and your same name. At least, that’s what we thought in our twenties. The things we want out of life now—freedom of speech and the press and effecient systems and proper justice and clean air—all those things might be easier somewhere else? What do I know, I’ve only ever known here.

I remember once my grandmother offering me this new pack of undies, they were this horrible brown and very unattractive, and so I said, “No” and she said, “But they’re from America” and ok, I was running low on underwear just then so I took them and true to promise, those ugly brown underpants lasted several years without even fraying slightly.

I encountered America through these cousins and aunts and suitcases way before I actually thought of it as a country. The suitcases, usually three or four, in shiny colours, clean as could be, released this spicy, foreign smell, so exotic, whenever they were opened. The smell clung to everything they owned, from their underwear to their toothpaste, everything was a bit shinier, a bit more colourful, a bit better because it all smelt like Far Away. Years later, on my own holiday, I came home and unzipped my suitcase and there it was, that Abroad Smell. I decided then that it must come on through the cargo hold of the plane, something about being in the air for so long? This does not explain why the same smell doesn’t happen when you go on a domestic flight, so maybe it’s just the international air.

First would come out the presents. There were small presents: fun sized chocolate, mostly Snickers, but sometimes cookies like Chips Ahoy or Oreo. Bags and bags of Cheerios in ziplock containers. Then larger presents: clothes usually, t-shirts and jeans, when I was very small, I got party dresses, when I was older, I received long sleeved scooped neck tops (still use those!) and lots of tights. My oldest cousins went off to college and came back with gifts too, my favourite were a (short-lived) pair of Nikes, before Nike came to India, which my dog, a mongrel I’d never fully succeeded in training, decided to demolish almost instantly, as though she had taken a personal hatred to these shoes. I hadn’t even bothered to lock them away because by then she was two years old and had outgrown chewing on our shoes ages ago. I suppose it was the smell that drove her wild.

After the presents, the chocolate that we ate sparingly, one a day so they would last weeks, my foreign relatives would leave in a storm of detritus, leaving behind them shampoo and conditioner, sometimes toothpaste, striped toothpaste, that tasted so much better than the red Close Up my family had been buying for years, as though no other brand existed.

A few years later, I discovered Archie comics. I remember being aware of them as early as eight or nine, but the year I turned ten, they entered my life in a big way. Every summer we’d take a train to Hyderabad, to spend some time with my grandparents and aunts and uncles and cousins, and I’d buy two Archie comics as a treat at a stall in New Delhi Railway Station. Then, carefully, because I knew the train time table, I’d finish each one before our next long stop. Nagpur meant oranges, Nagpur meant a longer stop where I hopped out and exchanged my read comics for new ones at half the price at the book stall there. And so on, all the way till we reached Hyderabad the next day and we’d see the anxious, waiting faces of our relatives on the platform.

Riverdale became more familiar to me than anything I’d read in a Tinkle comic or an Amar Chitra Katha. Tinkle was fun, but not funny, and filled with stories about kids who talked in an odd, stilted fashion, not like I did. Amar Chitra Katha was stories from the epics, and so thin, that they were hardly value for money, I’d be done with them by the time we pulled out of the station. Even now, all these years later, I can remember what it felt like to open a new Archie Double Digest, thick, sixty page comics, full of coloured illustrations, smelling so new and rich, the paper nice enough to stay in shape, even when you left it face down on your seat. I was devoted to them, to Archie, with his two quiffs of red hair and freckles across his nose, to Betty and Veronica who looked identical if you covered their hair with one finger, wondering why Archie was so torn, when it seemed clear that Betty was the better person. Reggie, I wondered why everyone was friends with, Jughead was the only one with individuality, forever eating, despite his skinny physique, Moose who loved Midge, who tried to get away from him for the more sophisticated Reggie. Mr Lodge, Hiram, and Mrs Lodge, Hermione. (I have tried to watch the Netflix adaptation of Riverdale, but find it too Gossip Girl, too New Age Teen Show to agree with my memories.) (When in 1990, the made-for-TV movie To Riverdale And Back Again finally came out on video in India, that was much more my speed, to watch everyone grown up but still with the same essence that made up my love for the comic books. I remember discussing the movie right before we watched it with one of my mum’s friends, and I said, “Maybe Moose and Midge won’t even be together” and she said, “Oh no, Moose and Midge are definitely married” and I remember being so surprised that an adult knew the dynamics of the Moose/Midge relationship.)

love triangle crush GIF by Archie Comics

But what fascinated me the most about Archie comics was how they portrayed America. This was a slice-of-life we were getting way before cable TV (1992) or the internet properly (1994/5?). Sure, we had watched the movies before but that was Hollywood. Archie comics were real America, we were told. Their concerns were just like every other American teen. Mostly, I was wonderstruck at the dating. How they dated, how their parents were apparently chill with all this dating, how boys and girls hung out together at Pop’s Diner, how they seemed so independent of little things like asking for permission or coming home at a certain time. My own teen years were so far away from me at this point, I could imagine living in Riverdale easier than I could imagine being sixteen or seventeen. America, I decided, was where teenagers could have boyfriends and girlfriends, as normally as they had a glass of milk in the morning.

I have been to the US three times in my life. Once was when I was very small, I was only two, and I have no memories of this trip, but there are so many photographs I might as well have been there. The next time, the trip I actually remember and count as my first was when I was eleven. At the time, my mother was working at a news bureau that sent her to all sorts of amazing places for work. This was a great gig, and one I envy to this day. That summer, 1993, she was in Brazil and it was decided that I should meet up with her at my aunt’s house in New Hampshire—which by the way is a state that comes up a lot during my recent watch of The West Wing so I’m delighted that I actually went somewhere they show on TV. Meeting up with her there meant travelling alone, and while I had been travelling alone practically my whole life—whenever she went on one of these foreign junkets she put me on a plan to Hyderabad so I was an old hand at airports and being what they called an “unaccompanied minor”—this was the longest flight I’d ever had all by myself. I remember not much of the flight except that everyone was very nice to me, the pilots let me into the cockpit before we took off. (ah, those pre-9/11 days!) (as a matter of fact, I have not returned to America since 9/11, I last went when I finished high school in 2000, so I imagine all my memories are soft focused and fuzzy.)

I got a little goody bag from the flight, including pilot wings and some other things I considered myself too old for. It was all surprisingly well-organised, I wasn’t alone for a minute, and as soon as we touched down for my changing flights, another flight attendent or someone took over. I had very short hair then, and people kept asking the lady in charge of me whether I was a boy or a girl, which is… weird? what a strange question, and finally, the woman said she was going to hold up a sign that said, “It’s a girl!” to stop people asking, which is also strange and not very PC in this day and age, but those were the Days of Long Ago, friends, and so I just smiled nervously, and at the other end was my aunt and two cousins come to pick me up.

Of course, everything in America in 1993 was so different from India that we may as well have been on different planets. We went to Disney-one of them, the one in Florida. I shook hands with cartoon characters. I won a large stuffed Bart Simpson at a local fair. I made the family come with me on a trip to Louisa May Alcott’s house where as the youngest reader of Little Women, they took me up to the attic, still in renovation, so I could see where “the real Jo” worked. Everything was very large and spread apart, and things tasted different, even Indian food made at home. I sat at a Burger King, all three of us, me and my two younger cousins with paper crowns on our heads that they gave children, and I stared at a couple making out, just going at it, in one booth, because I had never seen anything like that before, never, not in my whole life, and the boy of the couple detached and gave me a very hard stare until I got the hint and looked away. I visited my six-year-old cousin’s first grade class and gave a little talk and passed out little clay figurines from Cottage Emporium, and someone asked me about elephants and someone else asked me about the “little dots on their foreheads” and the teacher asked me who the prime minister was, which answer I actually remembered, and then they asked if I’d like to hang out with my peer group all day and I saw the sixth graders, who were huge, they were so tall and double my height and so fast and I just felt small and strange so I hung out with the six year olds and felt far more at home. I even went on their class trip with them and even though there were two Indian girls next door, thirteen and ten, they asked me immediately whether I had a boyfriend and my aunt overheard and they were not fit company for me any more.

In the year 2000, I was far less shy but still not completely confident. I was staying briefly with a cousin in her college dorm, and I remember jet lag laying me low, and also making a trip by myself to New York City and then us two going to watch The Phantom of the Opera from the standing row seats, and I remember being passed on, relative to relative, like a parcel, across the United States. In each place, I was made welcome, and in each place, I did a little exploring on my own, and then rejoined my host family. In Maryland, my DC stop, I was surprised that they ate plain salted Pringles like papad on the side of their sambhar-rice. In Los Angeles, I put my hand into Marilyn Monroe’s, and went on a studio tour. We visited Harvard, and I bought myself a t-shirt and a book from the bookstore. We went whale watching and to the San Diego zoo. My family was only on the coasts so I saw nothing in the middle, but I remember taking the train and taking a bus, where was I going, I don’t remember, but I remember sitting in so much public transport. To send an eighteen-year-old off by herself is perhaps the biggest mark of trust adults can put on you. My whole life I was sheltered, but not so sheltered that I couldn’t think to find a pay phone and make a call when I was going to be late.

One of my favourite paintings for how nicely lonesome it makes me feel. Nighthawks by Edward Hopper

This was supposed to be a newsletter about having guests and instead it became one about being one. Be a good guest though, it doesn’t take too much work. Tidy up after yourself. Stick to the hours you promised, and if you don’t, make sure your hosts have plenty of notice. I was too young and too Indian to offer to help out with any of the housework, but do that also, don’t wait for someone to ask you. To be a good guest, you must be accommodating and delighted with treats organised for you, and tell good stories over a bottle of wine, and be no trouble. I was always a little sad to see our house guests go, though it had been several weeks of people sleeping on mattresses on the floor, several weeks of eating out and whirlwind tours of Delhi in the heat of the day, when everyone sensible is taking a nap with the cooler on.

I haven’t been back to the Taj Mahal since those guest filled summer holidays, I kind of miss it now. “And then,” the guide would always say, sticking out one arm to gesture, “Shah Jahan planned to build his own tomb, completely in black marble, across the river so the two of them could rest together. Alas, he died before he could begin.” This turned out to be a myth like all stories that are too good to be true, but it’s a nice thought, like Riverdale being America, like the smell of foreign suitcases, like seeing the inside of a cockpit once, like people being kind for the most part.

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WELL. Having meandered more than is my usual wont, let me make up for not being able to tell a straight story this fortnight by giving you links that definitely stick to the point.

Previously in the alphabet series: A, B, C, D, E and F.

Weird stories that are definitely… something.

The bestselling author Sara Gruen apparently lost most of her savings and her health trying to get someone she didn’t even know off death row.

This man says he has the largest penis in the world.

This white professor pretended to be black her whole adult life.

CRIME AND BLOOD

Murrrderrrr on the Appalachian trail.

Rich people problems

This whole marvelous paragraph and more to mock from here.

DELIGHTFUL stories probably featuring animals

The crow whisperer.

What if all the humans vanished?

The slow gentrification of the god Shiva.

Bookish adjacent

The strange undeath of middlebrow.

Tana French and houses.

That’s ten links, I have more but I feel like ten is about the maximum amount of tabs you can open from one email, so we’ll save some for next time.

Have a great week, despite recent lockdown rules making a lot of us across the country have to stay in from 10 pm to 5 am. Do I still need to say “be safe” for you to magically be safe? Very well then: be safe.

xx

m

Where am I? The Internet Personified! A mostly weekly collection of things I did/thought/read/saw that week.

Who are you? Meenakshi Reddy Madhavan, writer of internet words (and other things) author of seven books (support me by buying a book!) and general city-potter-er.

Follow me on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. (Plus my book recommendation Instagram!)

Got sent this newsletter? Sign up here to subscribe!

Forward to your friends if you liked this and to that one NRI uncle who insists on random tradition when he’s back in India despite his very modern life abroad if you didn’t.

Also, write back to me! I love to hear from you.

3 April 2021

Today in Photo


Saturday nights once so full of activity are now spent watching The West Wing on my laptop. However, no reason why a good hair day should be wasted by not being documented, eh? ALSO I bought a set of men's boxers to wear as sleeping shorts and unusually for boxers, they have POCKETS so that's also a cause for celebration. #nightin #couchpotato

via Instagram

2 April 2021

Today in Photo


I wrote a little poem instead of actually cleaning the kitchen. #poetry

via Instagram