Experience reading like never before
Read in your favourite format - print, digital or both. The choice is yours.
Track the shipping status of your print orders.
Discuss with other readersSign in to continue reading.

"It was a wonderful experience interacting with you and appreciate the way you have planned and executed the whole publication process within the agreed timelines.”
Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalHailing from the small but ever-growing north Bengal town of Siliguri, the exposure to characters, situations and human reactions have been a part of Pinakie’s life from the very beginning. And as life progressed from the foothills to the Himalayan heights, from being a young educator in Sikkim to giving physical shape to marketing dreams in Delhi-NCR, his experiences only kept getting filled up. Cliched as it may sound of being a corporate-to-creativity crossover, Pinakie doesn’t claim to be a habitual writer – rather he’s happy being an author of experiences and emotions. Debuting Read More...
Hailing from the small but ever-growing north Bengal town of Siliguri, the exposure to characters, situations and human reactions have been a part of Pinakie’s life from the very beginning. And as life progressed from the foothills to the Himalayan heights, from being a young educator in Sikkim to giving physical shape to marketing dreams in Delhi-NCR, his experiences only kept getting filled up.
Cliched as it may sound of being a corporate-to-creativity crossover, Pinakie doesn’t claim to be a habitual writer – rather he’s happy being an author of experiences and emotions. Debuting with Mountains to Manhattan, a fiction on the refugee crisis of the Tibetans in diaspora, Pinakie finds it challenging and rather satisfying as a writer, to put himself in the shoes of his women characters. His second book, A Basket of Sunflowers takes this journey forward, navigating through the lives of seven women and their stories.
Pinakie’s passion is to write about people, culture, ethos and philosophy. Exploring issues of identity, family relations, history excites him. His stories are not exactly about his experiences, rather his interpretation of what the characters around him go through.
Read Less...
A single headline. A ruined reputation.
A system already in motion. When young corporate executive Juneli Bose wakes to a viral scandal linking her to one of India’s most powerful industry leaders, her world collapses within hours. Anonymous accusations, fabricated financial trails, coercive interrogations, and media frenzy converge — pushing her into a trap she neither understands nor controls. What appears to be a personal controver
A single headline. A ruined reputation.
A system already in motion. When young corporate executive Juneli Bose wakes to a viral scandal linking her to one of India’s most powerful industry leaders, her world collapses within hours. Anonymous accusations, fabricated financial trails, coercive interrogations, and media frenzy converge — pushing her into a trap she neither understands nor controls. What appears to be a personal controversy soon reveals something far more dangerous - a coordinated corporate and political design where truth is negotiable, and people are expendable.
Behind closed boardrooms and global business empires, rival power centers maneuver quietly — investors, directors, loyalists, and whistle blowers — each protecting interests measured in influence, not innocence. As hidden money flows, proxy ownership, media manipulation, and institutional pressure begin to surface, the question is no longer who is guilty — but who benefits.
The Perfect Chaos is a corporate thriller about engineered narratives, weaponised perception, and the brutal cost of becoming collateral damage in elite power struggles — where chaos is not a breakdown, but a strategy.
A single headline. A ruined reputation.
A system already in motion. When young corporate executive Juneli Bose wakes to a viral scandal linking her to one of India’s most powerful industry leaders, her world collapses within hours. Anonymous accusations, fabricated financial trails, coercive interrogations, and media frenzy converge — pushing her into a trap she neither understands nor controls. What appears to be a personal controver
A single headline. A ruined reputation.
A system already in motion. When young corporate executive Juneli Bose wakes to a viral scandal linking her to one of India’s most powerful industry leaders, her world collapses within hours. Anonymous accusations, fabricated financial trails, coercive interrogations, and media frenzy converge — pushing her into a trap she neither understands nor controls. What appears to be a personal controversy soon reveals something far more dangerous - a coordinated corporate and political design where truth is negotiable, and people are expendable.
Behind closed boardrooms and global business empires, rival power centers maneuver quietly — investors, directors, loyalists, and whistle blowers — each protecting interests measured in influence, not innocence. As hidden money flows, proxy ownership, media manipulation, and institutional pressure begin to surface, the question is no longer who is guilty — but who benefits.
The Perfect Chaos is a corporate thriller about engineered narratives, weaponised perception, and the brutal cost of becoming collateral damage in elite power struggles — where chaos is not a breakdown, but a strategy.
Seven women, seven places, seven stories. From the bucolic lush green tea gardens of North Bengal to the glitzy Manhattan, each story is built around interesting characters, plots, and subplots. All these educated and highly accomplished women raise a subtle question about women's inhibitions and their silent screams. Not all of them can seek redressal from their problems, legally or socially. Many like to bear the cross in martyrdom in silence, but others do
Seven women, seven places, seven stories. From the bucolic lush green tea gardens of North Bengal to the glitzy Manhattan, each story is built around interesting characters, plots, and subplots. All these educated and highly accomplished women raise a subtle question about women's inhibitions and their silent screams. Not all of them can seek redressal from their problems, legally or socially. Many like to bear the cross in martyrdom in silence, but others do not.
Niharika, whose fiancée had ghosted on her date of marriage, was never to appear again for twenty years. Aditi was a single mother of choice, and she fought against the social norm of living her life the way she wanted to. Suparna was a highly qualified young woman who discovered that her disqualification in life was not in her own hands. Maitrayee was a single mother, but it wasn't a choice. She rejected her husband but was unable to overcome her love for him. Anuradha had not been able to solve the mystery of how a man who seemed so loving and committed could morph overnight into a stranger. Debjani, who was a much-appreciated public relations officer, was powerless to deal with her husband, who believed that her child's father was someone else. Suchandra was a victim of domestic violence, who came out of a violent life and started a new life, but not with a new, independent identity.
Are you sure you want to close this?
You might lose all unsaved changes.
India
Malaysia
Singapore
UAE
The items in your Cart will be deleted, click ok to proceed.