She was fascinated with kolams right from childhood and recalls taking long winding routes to her school just to take a ...
Chuttamalle song from Junior NTR and Janhvi Kapoor's film 'Devara: Part 1', is sung by Shilpa Rao and ... in which he was seen singing the song 'Urvashi-Urvashi' with Rahman.
Eddie Brock is back and bonding with a new symbiote this week as Marvel Comics releases Eddie Brock: Carnage #1; check out the official preview below… THE MOST LETHAL PROTECTOR OF ALL! He’s been VENOM ...
Hawaiian scholar Mary Kawena Pukui is credited with writing over 50 books, including the Hawaiian language dictionary and the ‘Ōlelo No’eau, a book collection of proverbs and poetical sayings. Author ...
Here are some key insights to know before, and after, reading We Do Not Part. “When people asked me what kind of book this was ... took place between March 1, 1947 and Sept 21, 1954, on Jeju ...
The indie band’s second album finds the trio blending lyrical abstraction and mystery with a refined approach to their ...
The choreographer Akram Khan’s “Gigenis,” based loosely on a character in the Mahabharata, represents a kind of homecoming ...
The Super Bowl this year features the Kansas City Chiefs against the Philadelphia Eagles on February 9, with Ledisi performing 'Lift Every Voice and Sing' as the Black national anthem, sparking ...
The 'Breathless' singer expressed his gratitude for being a part of the event and called it an honour to perform at Mahakumbh. He extended his thanks to Prime Minister Narendra Modi and Chief ...
Indigenous elders worldwide came together to share their ancestral wisdom in their upcoming book, " Sacred Ceremony For A Sacred Earth ." The authors, Aniwa’s Council of Elders, comprises some of the ...
This culminated last year with a Nobel Prize, in light of which there’s been even more excitement than usual around her new book, We Do Not Part. Han’s 2014 novel Human Acts took as its ...
Producer Sara Zarreh tells the story of Margery Kempe, believed to be the first woman to write an autobiography in the English language, more than five hundred years ago.