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B. S. Dara: The Voice Indian Fiction Cannot Ignore |
By
Webindia123 Editor
19.8.2025
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Now he builds stories that hold what most people try to hide. Erotic. Emotional. Unforgiving. His Stories you swore you''d burn.
It marked Dara as someone willing to write love without filters, exposing the beauty and the damage in the same breath.
Then came the second.
I, You and PuneI, You and Pune is a love story that doesn''t try to be one. It follows Ananya Sharma, an MBA graduate with deadlines in her calendar and damage in her chest. Enter Veer Singh. He opens doors, listens too well, kisses too deeply, and ruins her in all the quiet ways no one prepares you for.
Sex mistaken for love, and love mistaken for freedom. They move in together. They make love. They fall apart. There''s no happy ending. Just real ones.
Set against rain-slicked streets of Pune, where loneliness feels louder than love, the novel doesn''t give easy answers. It asks the harder questions: What do you do when love is real but not enough? How do you carry desire when it turns into recklessness?
Click here to find "I, You and Pune" and "The Insatiable" by B. S. Dara on Amazon today.
Writing Unfiltered. Unforgiving. Undone. Sensual. Stark.B. S. Dara undresses the wounds most writers avoid, love, loneliness, sex, shame, and writes them raw, wet, and unedited. No silk-draped love scenes, he writes intimacy like a commitment whispered mid-orgasm. His stories don''t give you closure. They give you reminders.
The Man Outside the BooksQuiet in life, fearless on the page, Dara brings a rare emotional precision to Indian fiction.
He writes of women who count the cost of staying, and men who only learn too late what they ruined.
In a country where writers often reach for masks, Dara insists on unmasking. He has carved out a place in Indian fiction as a dangerous voice, one who writes the price of being real in a world that rewards pretending.
Building His Place in Indian LiteratureTwo books in, and B. S. Dara isn''t just writing fiction, he''s rewriting the anatomy of desire in Indian English literature. His stories have struck a chord with readers who know that love isn''t always beautiful, that love isn''t always tender. Sometimes it''s unspoken. Sometimes it''s wet. Sometimes it''s brutal. And that''s exactly why it matters
"Quiet in life, dangerous in fiction--B. S. Dara is Indian literature''s most precise knife." (ADVERTORIAL DISCLAIMER: The above press release has been provided by PNN. ANI /webindia123.com will not be responsible in any way for the content of the same)