Indo-American Arts Council

Literary Festival 2025

International House

November 15-16, 2025

12:00 – 12:50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name – Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

Break – 1.00 – 2.00 PM

02:00 – 02:50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name – Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

03:00 – 03:50 PM

book-placeholder
book-placeholder

Book Name – Author Name and Book Name – Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

04:00 – 04:50 PM

book-placeholder

Author Name discusses  – Book Name

05:00 – 05:50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name – Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

11:00 – 11:50 AM

book-placeholder
book-placeholder

Author NameBook Name and Author NameBook Name in conversation with Moderator Name

12.00 – 12.50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

Break – 1.00 – 2.00 PM

02.00 – 02.50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name – Editor Name and Translator Name in conversation with Moderator Name

03.00 – 03.50 PM

book-placeholder
book-placeholder

Book Name Author Name and Book Name Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

04.00 – 04.50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

05.00 – 05:50 PM

book-placeholder
book-placeholder

INDUSTRY PANEL:

Book Name Name and Editor Name in conversation with Moderator Name

12.00 – 12.50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

Break – 1.00 – 2.00 PM

02.00 – 02.50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name – Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

04.00 – 04.50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

04.00 – 05:50 PM

book-placeholder

POETRY
****PLEASE NOTE: THIS SESSION WILL BE HELD AT THE PUB AT INTERNATIONAL HOUSE
Poets Name, Name, Name, Name, and Name with join Moderator Name for a special panel discussing identity, language, and creative expression.

To end the evening on an exciting note, the festival will host a poetry slam where emerging poets and spoken word artists will compete to win a $100 prize and a signed first edition of one of the featured poets works.

Poets Name / Name / Name / Name / Name
in conversation with Moderator Name

05.00 – 05:50 PM

book-placeholder
book-placeholder

Book Name Author Name and Book Name Author Name in conversation with IAAC Vice Chairman, Moderator Name

12.00 – 12.50 PM

book-placeholder
book-placeholder

Book Name Author Name and Book Name Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

01.00 PM – 01:50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name Translator Name in conversation with Moderator Name

2.00 PM – 02:50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

12.00 – 12.50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

01.00 – 01:50 PM

book-placeholder

Book Name – Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

2.00 PM- 02:50 PM

book-placeholder
book-placeholder

Book Name Author Name and Book Name Author Name in conversation with Moderator Name

Indo-American Arts Council

Literary Festival 2025

International House

November 15-16, 2025

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
11.00 – 11.50 AM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-placeholder1

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
12:00 – 12:50 PM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
12.00 – 12.50 PM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
12:00 – 12:50 PM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
02.00 – 02.50 PM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
02.00 – 02.50 PM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-placeholder1

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
02.00 – 02.50 PM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
03.00 – 03.50 PM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-placeholder1

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
03.00 – 03.50 PM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-placeholder1

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
04.00 – 04.50 PM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
04.00 – 04.50 PM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
04.00 – 04.50 PM 

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 15 November 2025
05.00 – 05:50 PM

Author Name

Book Talk: Book Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

INDUSTRY PANEL:
Saturday, 15 November 2025

05.00 – 05:50 PM

Author Name

Author Bio

img-placeholder1

Author Name

Author Bio

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Moderator Name

Moderator Bio

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 09 November 2024
04.00 – 05:50 PM

POETRY

Guillermo Rodríguez

Book Talk: Soma: Poems by A.K. Ramanujan

Guillermo Rodríguez, an active promoter of Indo-Spanish cultural relations, is the founding director of Casa de la India, a pioneering cultural centre in Spain, which has become the model for India's cultural diplomacy abroad. A passionate traveller, it was during an overland trip to India in the early 1990s that he chanced upon A.K. Ramanujan’s poetry and translations, an interest that evolved into a PhD. on the poet-scholar, obtained from the University of Kerala and University of Valladolid. He is the author of When Mirrors Are Windows. A View of A.K. Ramanujan’s Poetics (2016) and co-editor of Journeys. A Poet’s Diary by A.K. Ramanujan (2019).

img-placeholder1

Krishna Ramanujan

Book Talk: Soma: Poems by A.K. Ramanujan

Krishna Ramanujan is a science writer at Cornell University in Ithaca, New York. Coupled with life-long literary interests, he has worked as a writer for Earthwatch Radio, NASA and Cornell University, and has published more than 2,000 news stories on topics related to climate change, ecology, biology and genetics. He is the winner of the State University of New York Award for Excellence in Writing (2022), and co-editor of Journeys. A Poet’s Diary by A.K. Ramanujan (2019). He is the son of AK Ramanujan.

img-placeholder1

Anand Thakore

Book Talk: Three Indian Poets

Anand Thakore is the author of six books of verse, a number of critical essays on music and poetry and a pamphlet of 'Khayal' lyrics in Hindi. Arundhati Subramaniam has published 13 books. Her first UK collection, Where I Live: New & Selected Poems, was published by Bloodaxe Books in 2009. When God Is a Traveller followed in 2014. A Poetry Book Society Choice shortlisted for the T.S. Eliot Prize, When God Is a Traveller won the inaugural Khushwant Singh Prize at the Jaipur Literary Festival, the International Piero Bigongiari Prize in Italy, and the Sahitya Akademi Award.

img-placeholder1

Diane Mehta

Book Talk: Tiny Extravaganzas

The poems in Mehta's collection are miniaturist epics that respond to a difficult world with experiments and surprises. The book emerges from Mehta's attention to the ways that art concentrates experience. It's a love song to middle age, unwelcome and untidy. She demonstrates how observation counterpoints tragedy, and how tiny poems can be orchestral. Her mixed-race immigrant background shapes her decision to make the American sentence a place of exploration and conflict. Every poem hinges on a double narrative of grief and art. Mehta uses this as a framework for designing a new kind of poetry collection that is defined by its tension. Mehta jazzes up a lament to celebrate how love has a rhythm and texture that gives meaning to grief, and slows a meditation to draw out the palpably energizing moments of daily life. Radicalized by the belief that grief and art have no limits, she anchored these ideas in a collection about the ways that the imagination can make sense of experience. Diane Mehta was born in Frankfurt, grew up in Bombay and New Jersey, studied in Boston, and now makes her home in New York City. Books include an essay collection (University of Georgia Press, 2025), two poetry collections, Tiny Extravaganzas (Arrowsmith Press, 2023), Forest with Castanets (Four Way Books, 2019), and a literary guide, How to Write Poetry (2005). She is finishing a novel set in 1946-7 Mumbai that folds in events from the partitions of India and Palestine. Her work has been recognized by fellowships at Civitella Ranieri and Yaddo, the Café Royal Cultural Foundation, and the Peter Heinegg Literary Award. She was an editor at A Public Space, PEN America, and Guernica. She publishes poetry, essays, and criticism for The New Yorker, The New York Times, The Times Literary Supplement, Harvard Review, Harvard Divinity Bulletin, Kenyon Review, The Guardian, Virginia Quarterly Review, American Poetry Review, and A Public Space. She is collaborating with musicians to invent a new way of working through sound together, with two artists on a lifelong reading of Dante’s Commedia, and with the New Chamber Ballet in Brooklyn.

img-placeholder1

Kashiana Singh

Book Talk: Woman by the door

It is often said that distance offers clarity and equilibrium. In this collection, the distance could be a few decades or a few days depending on where the poem finds its occasion. In a nutshell therefore I would say that 'Woman by the door' gathers poems about memory, grief, , hope. These poems explore universal themes of identity, culture and home. These poems like the quintessential woman are always at the dehleez/threshold/doorway, in search of new beginnings, new meaning. When Kashiana is not writing, she lives to embody her TEDx talk theme of Work as Worship into her every day. Her second full-length collection, Woman by the Door was released in 2022 with Apprentice House Press and her newest full-length collection, Witching Hour is coming out in 2024 with Glass Lyre Press. She proudly serves as President for North Carolina Poetry Society and Managing Editor for Poets Reading the News.

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Ravi Shankar

Pushcart prize winning poet, translator and professor Ravi Shankar has published, edited or has forthcoming over fifteen books, including the Muse India award-winning translations of 9th century Tamil poet/saint, Andal, 'The Autobiography of a Goddess' (Zubaan/University of Chicago), 'The Golden Shovel: New Poems Honoring Gwendolyn Brooks" (University of Arkansas) and 'The Many Uses of Mint: New and Selected Poems 1997-2017' (Recent Works Press). Along with Tina Chang and Nathalie Handal, he co-edited W.W. Norton's "Language for a New Century: Contemporary Poetry from the Middle East, Asia & Beyond" and he founded one of the world's oldest electronic journals of the arts, Drunken Boat. He has taught and performed around the world and currently holds a research fellowship from the University of Sydney. His collaborative chapbook, 'A Field Guide to Southern China' written with T.S. Eliot Prize winner George Szirtes was just published in the UK August 2019 by Eyewear Publishing.

img-moderator-Placeholder

Poetry Slam

As part of its 2024 Literary Festival, the Indo-American Arts Council announces a spoken word slam to be held at International House on Saturday, Nov. 9th. Performers of all ages and races are welcome so long as the content or creator reflects Indian culture. No screeds or rants or sermons please. The panel will be judged by an internationally acclaimed group of poets and the winner will receive $100 and a signed first edition.

img-placeholder1

Saturday, 09 November 2024
5.00 – 5:50 PM

Larry Bone

Book Talk: Myself Lost

Larry Bone was born in Los Angeles, CA, 73 years ago. He grew up in Redondo Beach, which looks out over the Santa Monica Bay. He majored in English and minored in journalism at Santa Monica College and finished his degree at UCLA in 1976. His first novel, Myself Lost, was completed preceding his retirement from an administrative operations post in May of this year.

img-placeholder1

Shaun Fynn

Book Talk: Departures – A Journey with India description

Shaun Fynn is a visual storyteller, artist, designer, and author based in New York. He is the principal of the design, brand and communication agency StudioFYNN and the photographer and author of Departures: A Journey with India (Oro Editions/Goff books 2022) and Chandigarh Revealed/Le Corbusier’s City Today (Princeton Architectural Press / Mapin 2017). A graduate of Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London, he has lived and worked internationally including a three-year period in Chandigarh, India.

His works have been featured and exhibited in multiple forums including the Museum of Modern Art and the Sheila C. Johnson Design Center in New York City, the archive collections of the Yale Center for British Art and The Victoria & Albert Museum London, The United Nations International Labour Organization, The Atlantic, the Los Angeles Times, Fast Company and The Guardian. Fynn has been a visiting lecturer at the National Institute of Design in Ahmedabad and is currently an adjunct professor at Parsons School of Design in New York City. He is also a fellow of the Royal Society of Arts.

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Rakesh Kaul IAAC Vice Chairman

Rakesh K. Kaul is the author of the best-selling, historical drama The Last Queen of Kashmir (Harper-Collins 2016). His second novel, Dawn the Warrior Princess of Kashmir was published by Penguin India to critical acclaim in 2019. He was instrumental in the recovery of the Tengapura Durga, the oldest continuously worshipped Durga in the sub-continent, from Germany to India. He is a Granthika speaker specializing in Niti storytelling and a writer for major newspapers on the evolutionary forces within history, culture and society which lead to individual empowerment.

He was a founding contributor to the first Chair of India Studies at University of California Berkeley, to the Center for the Advanced Study of India at University of Pennsylvania and to the Mattoo Center for India Studies at SUNY. He served as Co-Chairman The Arts of Kashmir Exhibition, Asia Society, New York October 2008. He has received numerous honors for his Community contributions and is active in helping victims of Genocide in India in 1990. He sits on the Board of Jagati school in Jammu, India which educates children of these refugees. He is married to Dr. Sushma Kaul, a pediatric endocrinologist who sits on the Board of the non-profit We Win and they have two sons.

img-placeholder1

Sunday, 10 November 2024
12.00 – 12.50 PM

Karthik Ramanna

Book Talk: The Age of Outrage: How to Lead in a Polarized World

Karthik Ramanna is a professor of business and public policy at the University of Oxford's Blavatnik School of Government, where he's served as director of one of the world's most diverse leadership programs. Formerly a professor at Harvard Business School, he is an expert on business-government affairs and has won numerous awards, including the international Case Centre's Outstanding Case Writer prize, dubbed by the Financial Times as "the business school Oscars."

img-placeholder1

Ramesh Srinivasan

Book Talk: The Journey of Leadership

Ramesh Srinivasan is a Senior Partner in the New York Office of McKinsey and Company. Ramesh spent the first 11 years of this McKinsey career in India, and the last 19 years in New York. Ramesh is a leader in McKinsey’s Healthcare and Social Sector practices. Ramesh is the Global Dean of the Bower Forum, McKinsey’s CEO learning program. Along with a few others, Ramesh has recently authored “The Journey of Leadership”.

Ramesh has a Business Technology degree in Computer Science from IIT Madras. He has done his MBA from the Indian Institute of Management, where he was awarded a gold medal for academic excellence. Ramesh is on five education non-profit Boards.

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Mathew Veedon

Mathew Veedon is a Managing Director at Accordion with over 25 years of consulting, operating, and investing experience across a broad range of industries including consumer goods, healthcare, and technology. He focuses on high intervention situations, turnarounds and major transformations for portfolio companies of leading private equity firms. He has worked with senior executives on cost reduction, business reorganization, merger integration and synergy estimation.

Before joining Accordion, Mathew was the CFO for Corsicana Mattress Company, where he was involved in acquiring a competitor, restructuring the balance sheet and effecting a change of control. At Keyrock Partners, he focused on early-stage growth companies to unlock value with IoT, Cloud and Blockchain technologies. Mathew was also a Senior Advisor to Quest Turnaround advisors and a partner at Redding Consultants. Prior to joining Redding, Mathew was a Principal of NGV Partners Fund LLC, a seed stage technology fund and portfolio manager of Sachem Ventures. Mathew began his career with positions at Arthur Andersen and Accenture.

Mathew graduated from Sydenham College in Mumbai, India. He is a Chartered Accountant and holds an M.B.A. in Finance with a Strategy concentration from Yale University. He lives in New York and is an avid runner, who has completed five marathons.

img-placeholder1

Sunday, 10 November 2024
01:00 – 01:50 PM

Kalpana Raina

Book Talk: For Now, It Is Night

Kalpana Raina was born in Kashmir and lives in New York. She is a senior executive with extensive financial, management and advisory experience internationally. Raina is currently the Vice Chair at Words Without Borders, a premier online journal of translations. Her collaborative translation project of stories from the Kashmiri language, For Now, It Is Night, is her first work of translation.

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Padma Shri Subhash Kak

Subhash Kak is an author and scientist who lives in Oklahoma and Miami. His most recent books are Whispers from the Past: Art and Wisdom of Kashmir and The Age of Artificial Intelligence. His work has been showcased in the popular media including Discovery and History channels, PBS, Public TV in Europe, and in several documentaries on science and art.

img-placeholder1

Sunday, 10 November 2024
02:00 – 02:50 PM

Anshul Chaturvedi

Book Talk: The Vivekananda Handbook

Anshul Chaturvedi is a journalist who has worked across multiple locations – Jammu, Chandigarh, Lucknow, and Delhi – for over 25 years now, observing a wide spectrum from politics to cinema. He came across the works of Swami Vivekananda at 16 and has been unable to disengage from them since. He has been writing about Vivekananda for platforms including the Speaking Tree and his blog for 15-odd years. Anshul summarises Vivekananda as his Steven Covey, Dale Carnegie and life coach, all rolled in one. He is of the view that Vivekananda is more venerated than understood, and we do him a disservice by placing him on a pedestal of grand thought when he should be someone who walks along us in our everyday lives.

When not earning his daily bread, Anshul often engrossed in reading about WW2 and managerial philosophy and binge-watching police procedurals. Currently based in Delhi/Noida, he works as an Executive Editor with The Times Of India.

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Swami Sarvapriyananda

Swami Sarvapriyananda is Minister of the Vedanta Society of New York. He joined the Ramakrishna Order in 1994 and received final monastic vows in 2004. He previously served as Assistant Minister of the Vedanta Society of Southern California and was a Nagral Fellow at Harvard Divinity School in 2019-20. He is a world-renowned speaker on Vedanta, and has spoken at such prestigious forums as TEDx, SAND, Google Talk, the World Parliament of Religions in Toronto, and the United Nations Headquarters in New York. Swami Sarvapriyananda has engaged in dialogues with many eminent thinkers such as Rupert Spira, David Chalmers, Rick Archer and Deepak Chopra.

img-placeholder1

Sunday, 10 November 2024
12.00 – 12.50 PM

Veera Hiranandani

Book Talk: Amil and The After

Veera Hiranandani is the award-winning author of several books for young people. Her most recent middle-grade novel, Amil and The After, is a follow-up to her previous Newbery Honor-winning,The Night Diary. The Night Diary also received the 2019 Walter Dean Myers Honor Award, the 2018 Malka Penn Award for Human Rights in Children's Literature, and several other honors and state reading list awards. Her middle-grade historical novel, How to Find What You're Not Looking For, received the 2022 Sydney Taylor Book Award, the 2022 Jane Addams Book Award, and the New-York Historical Society Children's Book Prize among other accolades. Her first novel for young readers,The Whole Story of Half a Girl, was named a Sydney Taylor Notable Book and was a South Asia Book Award Highly Commended selection. She's also the author of the chapter book series, Phoebe G. Green. She earned her MFA in fiction writing at Sarah Lawrence College. A former book editor at Simon & Schuster, she's now a faculty member with the MFA in Writing for Children and Young Adults program at The Vermont College of Fine Arts.

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Raakhee Mirchandani

Raakhee Mirchandani is a journalist, children’s book author, activist and mom — not necessarily in that order.

Previously a feature writer and columnist for the New York Post, a managing editor at the New York Daily News and associate editor at the Boston Herald, Raakhee’s work has also appeared in Elle, Glamour, the Wall Street Journal, Redbook and HuffPo, and she was the editor-in-chief of Moneyish, published by Dow Jones.

The New Jersey-born daughter of immigrants, Raakhee is a proud supporter of many nonprofits, serving on the boards of the Tomorrows Children's Fund, the Hoboken Public Library, Stevens Cooperative School and the Children’s Book Council.

In 2020, Raakhee launched her podcast, “Brown Mom,” where she chats with friends and notables about being brown in America.

When she isn't writing or working on her podcast, Raakhee is either organizing her bookshelves, running races to raise money for the fight against pediatric cancer — or styling her very curly hair with new oils and potions. She lives in Hoboken, N.J., with her husband and daughter, the inspirations for Hair Twins and Super Satya Saves the Day. Raakhee invites you to follow her on Twitter @Raakstar and on Instagram @RaakstarWrites.

img-placeholder1

Sunday, 10 November 2024
01:00 – 01:50 PM

Sidhartha Mallya

Book Talk: Sad Glad

Sidhartha Mallya is an American Born, British raised, actor of Indian descent. He trained at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, University of London, graduating with a Master of Arts in acting. His film credits include the Netflix Original film, ‘Brahman Naman’ which premiered at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival, and the upcoming action film ‘Mafia Wars’ alongside Tom Welling. Sidhartha was also a part of the abc Television Group’s 2013 LA Showcase, and has appeared in various other productions.

Aside from acting, Sidhartha’s main focus has been on the promotion of mental health amongst the youth. In 2021, he released his first book If I’m Honest: A memoir of my mental health journey (Penguin Random House) to widespread acclaim. His second book titled Sad-Glad, a picture book written to help children deal with their emotions, was published in 2024 by the Children’s Division of Penguin Random House. Sad-Gladhas gone on to be a national bestseller, gaining the #1 spot in English Language and Children’s Books on the Nielsen Bookscan India Chart.

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Ravina Aggarwal

Ravina Aggarwal is an anthropologist who has written extensively about the Himalayas. Her publications include Searching for the Songbird, a mystery novel that won the 2023 Green Literature Festival Award for children's environmental fiction, Beyond Lines of Control: Performing the Border in Ladakh, India, two edited volumes, Into the High Ranges: The Penguin Book of Mountain Writing and Forsaking Paradise: Short Stories from Ladakh, and several articles. She was a tenured professor at Smith College, Massachusetts, and has worked for the Ford Foundation in New Delhi. Her most recent position was the director of Columbia University’s Global Center in India.

img-placeholder1

Sunday, 10 November 2024
02:00 – 02:50 PM

Anu Sehgal

Book Talk: I am a Lotus

Anu Sehgal is children’s author and the Founder of The Culture Tree, a cultural literacy and language education company that focuses on South Asia. She lives in New York with her family, and has two sons. Anu believes awareness of one’s heritage, culture and language is key for children to become self-aware and confident individuals. She holds an MBA from Yale University and has worked in the corporate sector for almost 15 years. She has received several awards and recognitions for her work in cultural literacy. Anu has written 5 books that represent stories and languages of India. Anu’s books have been selected at the World Literature Festival at NYPL, Brooklyn Museum’s annual Children’s Literature Festival and Asia Society’s AAPI Literature Festival. Additionally she and her organization have received several awards and recognitions from the NY State Assembly, Mayor’s office, The Society of Foreign Consuls.

img-placeholder1

Naumi Kak

Book Talk: Knotty Knots

Naumi Kak, the author of Knotty Knots, has dedicated much of her professional life to psychology, working with both adults and children. Now retired, she lives with her husband in Stillwater, though she often visits her grandchildren in Miami, where she is known as "Nani." Inspired by her grandkids' daily battles with brushing their hair, Naumi wrote Knotty Knots as her first children's book. In addition to her writing, she enjoys hiking, making handcrafted soaps and candles, and working on needlepoint projects.

img-moderator-Placeholder

In conversation with

Ravina Aggarwal

Ravina Aggarwal is an anthropologist who has written extensively about the Himalayas. Her publications include Searching for the Songbird, a mystery novel that won the 2023 Green Literature Festival Award for children's environmental fiction, Beyond Lines of Control: Performing the Border in Ladakh, India, two edited volumes, Into the High Ranges: The Penguin Book of Mountain Writing and Forsaking Paradise: Short Stories from Ladakh, and several articles. She was a tenured professor at Smith College, Massachusetts, and has worked for the Ford Foundation in New Delhi. Her most recent position was the director of Columbia University’s Global Center in India.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

What if I do not send a digital copy of my book?

Your application will be deemed incomplete and will not be processed until we receive a digital copy of your book.

What if I do not have a digital copy of my book?

Please contact us via email at admin@iaac.us so that we can further assist you. Please make sure to put “Digital Copy of Book Unavailable” in your subject title.

What is the deadline?

The application Deadline is May 15, 2025 11:59pm EST.

What are dates of publication being considered?

Books published in 2024, 2025 and scheduled for release in early 2026 will be considered.

Will you accept self-published books?

Self-published books will not be considered.

I submitted my book last year, can I submit the same book this year?

If your book was not part of our literary festival last year and falls within the publishing dates for this year, we welcome your submission.

When will I know if I am selected?

Invitations will go out in August.

Do you send out rejection letters?

We do our best to keep everyone informed about the status of their submission. Given the volume of submissions that we receive, we may inadvertently miss a few. Do reach out via email at admin@iaac.us if you don’t hear from us. Please make sure to enter Literary Festival Submission Status Enquiry in the Subject line.

Do you pay the authors?

The authors will receive an honorarium.

Who chooses the moderators?

The moderators are chosen by the IAAC literary team.
We welcome suggestions from the selected authors and/or their publishers but may not always be able to accommodate them.

Do you pay the moderators?

The moderators will receive an honorarium.

Will every author have an independent session?

Some sessions will be independent and others will be panel discussions, all sessions will have a moderator. Authors will be informed of the format of their session in advance.

Will IAAC purchase books?

IAAC will not purchase books.

Will I be able to sell my books at the venue if I am selected?

Book sales will be permitted for one hour after the author’s session. IAAC will not participate in the sale of books. Every author/publisher must make arrangements to have the books delivered to the venue and removed after their time slot has ended. IAAC will be happy to share links to the sites where the book is available for purchase.

If you have further questions, please reach out to us at admin@IAAC.us

Committee and Curators

IAAC - Preethi Urs

Preethi Urs

Festival Director

Preethi Urs is originally from Bengaluru and is now a proud New Yorker. She credits these two cities for birthing and nurturing her love for literature and the arts. She started her career in public relations where she helped international companies connect with their American counterparts. After completing an MS in education from Bank Street College of Education, she taught kindergarten and first grade. She and her husband live in Manhattan, where their two children were born and raised.

Jennifer Acker

Jennifer Acker is founder and editor in chief of The Common, and author of the debut novel The Limits of the World. Her short stories, essays, translations, and reviews have appeared in Amazon Original Stories, Washington Post, Literary Hub, n+1, The Yale Review, and Ploughshares, among other places. Acker has an MFA from the Bennington Writing Seminars and teaches writing and editing at Amherst College, where she directs the Literary Publishing Internship and organizes LitFest. She lives in western Massachusetts with her husband. jenniferacker.com

Dr. Ravi Shankar

Pushcart prize winning poet, translator and professor Ravi Shankar has published, edited or has forthcoming over fifteen books, including the Muse India award-winning translations of 9th century Tamil poet/saint, Andal, 'The Autobiography of a Goddess' (Zubaan/University of Chicago), 'The Golden Shovel: New Poems Honoring Gwendolyn Brooks" (University of Arkansas) and 'The Many Uses of Mint: New and Selected Poems 1997-2017' (Recent Works Press). Along with Tina Chang and Nathalie Handal, he co-edited W.W. Norton's "Language for a New Century: Contemporary Poetry from the Middle East, Asia & Beyond" and he founded one of the world's oldest electronic journals of the arts, Drunken Boat. He has taught and performed around the world and currently holds a research fellowship from the University of Sydney. His collaborative chapbook, 'A Field Guide to Southern China' written with T.S. Eliot Prize winner George Szirtes was just published in the UK August 2019 by Eyewear Publishing.

Professor Narayan Hegde

Professor Narayan Hegde is Emeritus Professor of English at SUNY College at Old Westbury, where he taught English, Indian, and World Literatures. As a Senior Fellow of the American Institute of Indian Studies, he has translated several works of Kannada literature, including Stallion of the Sun and Other Stories by U. R. Ananthamurthy, Annayya's Anthropology by A. K. Ramanujan, and a 19th-century drama, The Marriage Farce of Iggappa Hegade. He is a recipient of the Katha Translation Award. Translation of Avasthe, a Kannada novel by the eminent Indian author, U.R.Ananthamurthy, was recently published by HarperCollins India. He is currently part of a team translating the 15th century Kannada epic Kumaravyasa Bharatha for publication by Harvard University Press in its Murty Classical Library of India series.

IAAC - Prof. S. N. Sridhar

Professor S.N. Sridhar

Professor S.N. Sridhar is SUNY Distinguished Service Professor, Professor of Linguistics and India Studies, and Director of the Mattoo Center for India Studies at Stony Brook University, where he has been teaching since 1980.He graduated from Central College, Bangalore University, with a B.A. (Honors) and M.A. in English literature and linguistics with a first class and the first rank for the University. He did a Ph.D. in Linguistics with distinction from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.Professor S.N. Sridhar is an internationally recognized expert on multilingualism, Indian linguistics, World Englishes, and Kannada. His research concerns many areas, including: bilingualism (language contact and convergence); sociolinguistics of code-switching and code-mixing, language modernization, language spread; second language acquisition in non-native settings; Indian English and other World Englishes; reference grammar of Kannada (syntax, morphology, social dimensions); psycholinguistics (sentence production, code-mixing), applied linguistics (scope and relation to linguistic theory), historical linguistics (acquisition of subjecthood, contact-induced language change), and history of linguistics (Indian grammatical tradition). Currently, he is working on a monograph on multilingualism in India and another on the classic Kannada poet Kumara Vyasa and another on multilingualism in India. He heads an international consortium of scholars translating the Kannada classic Mahabharata by Kumaravyasa into English, to be published in three volumes in the Murthy Classical Library by Harvard University.

Professor S.N. Sridhar is author of three books: Kannada: Descriptive Grammar (Routledge, 1990 and Manohar 2001), Cognition and Sentence Production: A Cross-Linguistic Study (Springer Verlag, 1986), and India Kannada (Contemporary Kannada, Kannada University, 1995 and Abhinava, 2009); co-editor of two reference volumes ( Ananya: A Portrait of India (AIA, 1997), and Language in South Asia (Cambridge, 2008) and seven special issues of journals, and author of numerous peer-reviewed articles, book chapters, and encyclopedia entries.

Professor S.N. Sridhar’s research has been supported by the National Science Foundation, the U.S. Department of Education, and the American Institute of Indian Studies. He was designated Senior/Superior Scholar in the Humanities by the National Endowment for the Humanities. He has been a plenary or keynote speaker at many international conferences, including the Linguistic Society of India in 2013, and member of editorial board of journals, evaluator of publication projects and academic programs. He was conferred the select faculty rank of Distinguished Service Professor by the State University of New York in 2011. He is Vice-President and President Elect of the International Association of World Englishes.

Professor S.N. Sridhar is a co-founder of South Asian Languages Analysis (SALA) and organized its international conferences at Stony Brook in 1983 and 2004. He has also organized or co-organized conferences on Dravidian Linguistics, India Studies, the Teaching of Linguistics, and Teaching of Asian Languages.

Professor S.N. Sridhar is the founding Director of the Center for India Studies at Stony Brook, which has evolved over two decades into a national model of Indian American community-public university partnership in developing India Studies. He also served as the Founding Chair of the Department of Asian and Asian American Studies from 2002-2008.Professor S.N. Sridhar is also active in the community. He founded the India Society of Stony Brook in 1989 and served as its first President until 1994. He has also served as a member of the Board of Trustees of the Association of Indians in America and of the American Institute of Indian Studies and the Board of Governors of the Indo-American Arts Council, New York.He lives in Stony Brook with his wife and collaborator, Professor Kamal (Meena) Sridhar.

Prof. Makarand Paranjape

Makarand R Paranjape is currently Director of Education, Access Health Care Physicians, Spring Hill, Florida. Professor of English at Jawaharlal Nehru University for nearly 25 years, he also served as Director, Indian Institute of Advanced Study (Shimla) and held several fellowships/visiting professorships including the inaugural India Chair at the South Asian Studies Programme, National University of Singapore, the Shivadasani Fellowship, Oxford Centre for Hindu Studies, the CAPES Visiting Professorship at the University of São Paulo and Federal University of Minas Gerais, and the inaugural Erich Auerbach Visiting Chair in World Literature at the University of Tuebingen. The author/editor of over 50 books, he has published over 200 academic papers/book chapters, and over a thousand newspaper/periodical essays and op-eds. His ongoing columns include “Soft Power” (Open magazine), “Right Turn” (Gulf News), “Truth or Dare” (ToI Plus), and “US Sutra” (FirstPost). His latest books include Mahatma Gandhi: Mrityu aur Punarutthan (Penguin Swadesh), Identity’s Last Secret (BluOne Ink), and Swami Vivekananda: Hinduism and India’s Road to Modernity (HarperCollins).

Media Center

Press Release

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Press Contact:

October 23, 2024

The Indo-American Arts Council Presents its 2024

Literary Festival: A Celebration of Indian and Diasporic

Voices in New York City

Dates: November 9-10, 2024
Venue: International House, 500 Riverside Dr, New York, NY 10027

Admission: Free and open to the public

New York, NY — The Indo-American Arts Council (IAAC) is thrilled to announce its 2024 literary festival, bringing together acclaimed authors, poets, and literary grand masters for a weekend of engaging book talks, panel discussions, and performances. Held at International House on November 9-10, 2024, the festival is free and open to all, offering audiences a unique opportunity to explore global Indian literature and culture.

This year’s festival promises to resonate strongly with both American and Indian-American audiences, featuring prominent voices like Amitava Kumar, whose works on identity and migration bridge both worlds, and Sonora Jha, whose critical lens on social justice speaks to current global and domestic conversations. Chef Asma Khan, celebrated for her globally renowned restaurant Darjeeling Express, comes into town from London. She joins Brook Eddy, founder of Bhakti Chai and they bring an exciting culinary edge to the festival, appealing to food lovers and entrepreneurs alike. Also featured is Harini Nagendra, a renowned ecologist and author, whose works captivate readers interested in literature and environmentalism, and Veera Hiranandani, author of acclaimed young adult fiction, appealing to both younger audiences and families. These authors, among others, present a broad range of topics, from leadership and activism to personal journeys and the art of storytelling.

We are also thrilled to announce that McKinsey & Company has come onboard as a Knowledge Partner, adding a new dimension to this year’s festival with their world-class insights and expertise. Equally exciting, the Prabha Khaitan Foundation (PKF) returns for a second consecutive year as a key partner, reinforcing the festival’s growing prominence as a premier celebration of Indian and global literature in New York City. Their support promises to elevate the IAAC Literary Festival to new heights!

Festival Highlights:

Saturday, November 9

  • Lakshmi Murdeshwar Puri, author of Swallowing the Sun, in conversation with Roopa Unnikrishnan
  • Sonora Jha, author of The Laughter, in conversation with Sayu Bhojwani
  • Raghav Rao (author of Missy) and Nishanth Injam (author of The Best Possible Experience) in conversation with Prof. Makarand Paranjape
  • Beena Kamlani discusses The English Problem
  • Amitava Kumar, author of My Beloved Life, in conversation with Beena Kamlani
  • Brook Eddy (author of STEEPED: Adventures of a Tea Entrepreneur) and Chef Asma Khan (author of Monsoon) in conversation
  • Shehla Rashid presents her book Role Models
  • Prof. S. N. Sridhar (Editor) and Prof. Narayan Hegde (Translator) discuss The Kannada Mahabharata with Anand Rao
  • Alka Joshi, author of The Jaipur Trilogy, in conversation with Shanelle Kaul
  • Tripurdaman Singh discusses Sixteen Stormy Days: Story of the First Amendment to the Constitution, in conversation with Venkat Dhulipala
  • Industry panel featuring Priya Doraswamy and Lucia Macro in conversation with Prof. Makarand Paranjape
  • Bhuwan Ribhu, author of When Children Have Children: Tipping Point to End Child Marriage, in conversation with Dinesh Khosla
  • Harini Nagendra, author of A Nest of Vipers, in conversation with Shiv Rao
  • Dr. Shuvendu Sen (author of The Fight Against Alzheimer’s) and Dr. Sandeep Jauhar (author of My Father’s Brain) in conversation with Dr. Sanat Chattopadhyay
  • Divya Prakash Dubey, author of Yaar Papa, in conversation with Anoop Bhargava

A highlight of the festival’s closing session on Saturday, November 9, will be a poetry panel featuring internationally acclaimed poets Guillermo Rodríguez Martín, Anand Thakore, Krishna Ramanujan, Kashiana Singh, and Diane Mehta moderated by Curator and poet Ravi Shankar. This session will explore powerful themes of identity, language, and culture, offering audiences an intimate look at these poets’ creative journeys.

To end the evening on an exciting note, the festival will host a poetry slam where emerging poets and spoken word artists will compete to win a $100 prize and a signed first edition of one of the featured authors’ works. The poetry slam promises to be a vibrant showcase of contemporary voices, blending the artistry of performance with powerful storytelling.

Sunday, November 10

  • Kalpana Raina, translator of For Now, It Is Night: Stories, in conversation with Padma Bhushan Subhash Kak
  • Larry Bone (author of Myself Lost) and Shaun Fynn (author of Departures: A Journey with India) in conversation with Rakesh Kaul
  • Karthik Ramanna (author of The Age of Outrage: How to Lead in a Polarized World) and Ramesh Srinivasan (author of The Journey of Leadership: How CEOs Learn to Lead from the Inside Out) in conversation with Deepak Raj
  • Anshul Chaturvedi, author of The Vivekananda Handbook, in conversation with Swami Sarvapriyananda
  • Veera Hiranandani, author of Amil and The After, in conversation with Raakhee Mirchandani
  • Siddhartha Mallya discusses his book Sad Glad, in conversation with Ravina Aggarwal
  • Anu Sehgal (author of I am a Lotus) and Naumi Kak (author of Knotty Knots) in conversation with Ravina Aggarwal

Rakesh Kaul, IAAC Vice Chairman, notes, “Our goal is to present a diverse array of voices that reflect the rich heritage of the Indian diaspora, while also connecting with universal themes that resonate with readers around the world. And best of all, it’s free!”

“With a diverse range of topics and literary works, the IAAC Literary Festival provides a rare opportunity for readers to engage with authors, learn about their creative processes, and explore the many ways Indian culture and storytelling intersect with global conversations.” added Preethi Urs, Literary Festival Director.

For more details and a full schedule of events, visit the IAAC website at www.iaac.us.

About IAAC
The Indo-American Arts Council (IAAC) is a not-for-profit organization committed to promoting and showcasing the arts and artists of Indian heritage. IAAC programs include visual arts, film, dance, and literature, offering a platform for creative voices from the global Indian community.

Media Contact
Indo-American Arts Council
Email: press@iaac.us
Website: www.iaac.us

LitFest2025

The Indo-American Arts Council (IAAC) is pleased to announce the 2025 IAAC Literary Festival in New York City on November 15th and 16th. This distinguished celebration of the written word shines a spotlight on the vibrant cultures of India and its diaspora, offering a platform for stories that inspire, challenge, and connect.

We invite submissions of published books across all genres, including poetry and children's literature. We welcome writings by Indian and diaspora authors, as well as by individuals of all backgrounds whose creations draw inspiration from or are deeply rooted in India’s rich cultural heritage. Original content in English and Indian languages (with English translations) are welcome.

Our festival has hosted luminaries such as Salman Rushdie, Amartya Sen, Megha Majumdar, Asma Khan, Alka Joshi, and Nobel Laureate Dr. Kailash Satyarthi, alongside powerful voices in literature and thought. It is a space where literary excellence meets cultural depth, and ideas transcend borders.

IAAC champions themes like Empowerment, Sustainability, and Inclusivity, forging partnerships with leading organizations like Poets & Writers and Kundiman. This is more than a festival—it’s a movement to elevate stories that matter.

We welcome your submissions and look forward to celebrating the transformative power of words. Join us in creating a legacy of literature that bridges worlds and celebrates humanity.

Here is information on some of our past festivals:

IAAC believes in supporting the artistic community. We have expanded our support for artists generally and authors specifically.
IAAC will:

  • Pay an author honorarium
  • Pay a moderator honorarium
  • Include a link to book purchase

About the Indo-American Arts Council :

The Indo-American Arts Council is a not-for-profit arts organization passionately dedicated to promoting, showcasing, and building an awareness of the arts and artists whose heritage lies in the Indian subcontinent in the performing arts, visual arts, literary arts, and folk arts. IAAC supports all the artistic disciplines in classical, fusion, folk, and innovative forms influenced by the arts of India. They work cooperatively with colleagues around the United States to broaden collective audiences and create a network for shared information, resources, and funding. The IAAC’s focus is to help artists and art organizations in North America as well as to facilitate artists from India to exhibit, perform, and produce their work in the United States. www.iaac.us