Running up a Himalayan hillside pulling leeches off her legs, covering drug busts in a gritty US suburb to uncovering racism under the pure Alpine snow, Ashwini Devare's fascinating memoir is about growing up as an Indian Foreign Service child in the 70s and 80s. From the Soviet Union's Iron Curtain to Burma's Bamboo Curtain, Ashwini Devare had lived in six countries by the time she was fifteen.
In each country, she had a front-row seat to tumultuous global events that redefined the twentieth century, from the death of Lal Bahadur Shastri to the integration of Sikkim into India, the assassination of Indira Gandhi to student-led democracy in South Korea.
This is a remarkable story of an Indian family that faces the challenges of love, loss and separation with resilience, optimism and courage. A family that would continually be flung from their comfort zones into alien, unfamiliar places, always holding hands to soften the landings. In the background was the constant comfort of the Indian flag-providing reassurance as they navigated their way in foreign lands.
Ashwini Devare is an award-winning author and broadcast journalist. Before turning to full-time writing, she worked in television news for 15 years. She was an on-air reporter and producer for the BBC's Asia Business Report in Singapore and a presenter for CNBC Asia in the mid-90s, when the channel first entered the Indian market.
Ashwini's latest book, Always a Foreigner is a coming- of-age memoir that chronicles her nomadic journey through six countries against the backdrop of historic political events. Previously published as Lost at 15, Found at 50, the book was shortlisted for the Singapore Literature Prize 2020 and won the Singapore Literature Prize Readers' Favourite English Book Award 2020.
Her first book Batik Rain was a collection of short stories that explore the theme of displacement and cross- cultural conflict.
Ashwini has a Master's degree in broadcast journalism from American University in Washington DC. She has two sons, one who is studying chemistry, and the other, a budding filmmaker. When Ashwini isn't writing, she is either reading or walking. She lives with her husband in Singapore.
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