• Titles

    try meTry Me by Farah Damji
    ISBN 978-1-907188-04-6

    A frank and eventful memoir penned by ex-socialite, art-dealer and journalist, Farah Damji. She tells the story, uncut, of growing up in Africa, relocating to London, the crazy New York days and finally, how and why she turned to crime. From the excesses of drugs to her much publicised, front-page affairs with members of media-luvvie London, this deeply personal tale leaves nothing undisclosed. An enthralling departure from the immigrant misery memoirs which have flooded the market in recent years, Farah’s voice is fresh and fearless. For further information on Try Me

    bikiniThe Bikini Murder by Farrukh Dhondy
    Called out of bed in the middle of the night, ex-Inspector Pradhan nabs a notorious serial killer, who has eluded him for twenty-five years, in a Kathmandu casino. Is all as it appears? Why would criminal, Thhat, risk coming to Nepal while still wanted there for an American girl’s murder? What is the message he now desperately wants to deliver to the US government? Pradhan attempts to piece the puzzle together from the details Thhat divulges about the beginning of his career in crime; the search for his Indian father; being drawn into the corrupt underworld of diamond smuggling; the tourists in Thailand and India whom he murdered, before being convicted and sent to Tihar.

    Did he mastermind his own long imprisonment? Is he behind an international double-cross involving the Taliban, his prison connections with Pakistani terrorists, and the CIA? Read this engrossing book, which the author denies is based upon the life of serial killer, Charles Sobraj. For further information on The Bikini Murder,

    NaipaulTelling Stories (Provisional Title)
    An exclusive monograph featuring a selection of previously unpublished interviews with literary giant, Sir V.S. Naipaul.

    When questioned as to whether he rated other authors, both living and dead, Sir Vidia remarked:
    “James Joyce?”
    “I never read blind writers.”
    “E.M. Forster?”
    “Went to India for his dirty and disgusting purposes.”
    “Jane Austen?”
    “Gossip. If she were Croatian, nobody would have taken any notice.”
    “Dickens?”
    “Very original to start with, then repeats and caricatures himself…”

    For further information on Sir V.S. Naipaul,

    The Terrorist Handbook by Omar Khyam
    Accused of participating in the London fertilizer bomb plot of 2007, young Muslim, Omar Khyam writes of his trial and subsequent acquittal.