Note to Readers

by Interviews Editor, Kabir Deb

My residence on earth

Wasn’t all that bad: I don’t mind

Coming back if need be.

       -K. Satchidanandan, ‘Instructions to the Undertaker’

Talking with people who see food through the lens of a camera or literature gives appetite a whole new dimension: it becomes political, revolutionary and comforting. In these interviews we explore the hunger at the centre and the edges of society, such hungers that provoke our conscience. Food is a part of our daily life more than anything else, something we consume through all our senses and consciousness. After all, food, as they say, is more a relationship than an object.

Our hearts beat within our ribcages with our hungers, passions and political beliefs; in this issue we lead our readers to feast on their own, and the writers’. Allow the seduction of such cogent, erudite, and engaging conversations on appetite in the Interviews section so you understand the truths of your own hungers, and those of others.

Best wishes,
Kabir Deb

Subscribe to our newsletter To Recieve Updates

    The Latest
    • Matchbox by Usawa October‘25 Issue

      This edition of Matchbox by Usawa explores the patterns, customs, and structures

    • The Intimate Affair Of Mortality And Disgust

      A haunting meditation on death’s intimacy, despair, and allure

    • The Room Of A Parallel World

      Sohini Sen’s The Dandelions Have It blends nature, mind, and oneness

    • The Book of Death

      A child’s surreal grief: shame, scream, and haunted theatrical silence

    You May Also Like
    • Two Poems By Meher Pestonji

      Meditations on the Sea The sea abandons shoals of shells broken and unbroken

    • Sweet Jasmine and Other Poems By Shikha Lamba

      “India is home to the largest number of child brides in the world: 23 million

    • My City is a Murder of Crows by Nikita Parik

      The city is a dream drafted in stone A night descends and jerks it into

    • An expansive ecolinguistic journey – Shabnam Mirchandani reviews Geetha Ravichandran’s book of poems

      the spell of the rain tree is an aural hike into rhizomatic trails brimming

    Subscribe to our newsletter To Recieve Updates

      The Latest
      • Matchbox by Usawa October‘25 Issue

        This edition of Matchbox by Usawa explores the patterns, customs, and structures

      • The Intimate Affair Of Mortality And Disgust

        A haunting meditation on death’s intimacy, despair, and allure

      • The Room Of A Parallel World

        Sohini Sen’s The Dandelions Have It blends nature, mind, and oneness

      • The Book of Death

        A child’s surreal grief: shame, scream, and haunted theatrical silence

      You May Also Like
      • A Conversation between Onir and Smita Sahay

        An interview with Onir, the award winning filmmaker about his latest book

      • Poem By Mani Rao

        How many oceans is a question in schools Four, five, or one, depending on your