Monday, August 17, 2015

India in All Its Wonder: A Special Visit to Delhi, My Favorite Hotel in Delhi. Shopping. Books. Everything You Need to Start Planning a Trip to Delhi and India. Or Dreaming of India.

This exciting week I am taking you on an insider visit to Delhi, India, to visit my favorite hotel, The Lodhi, and to meet experts and get rare and very special tips on shopping for jewels and fashion and style in Delhi. This compendium of book lists, shopping lists, and hot tips might be my longest in the six-year history of THE STYLE SALONISTE. 

Save it, print it out, and pass it on to your friends.


Robyn Bickford, co-manager of The Lodhi and a Delhi resident for four decades, has selected her favorite style shops.

And Fiona Caulfield, founder of the essential India Love Guides to Delhi and Jaipur and other regions, has picked her favorite Delhi jewelry shops.

I’ve also gathered an extensive and exclusive top list of books about India from London’s treasured bookshop, John Sandoe.

Books are essential to understanding and enjoying g India. I’ve chosen favorite India books from my library (with pictures). Persephone Books in London offered tips on favorite India books.

If you are planning—or even dreaming of—a visit to India, you will want to read and save this week’s post. Beautiful India and its literature. A treasured hotel, and India and its literature. Exclusively this week on THE STYLE SALONISTE.

Pour some Assam tea, or make a teapot of Darjeeling, or sip a cool lime soda.

It’s a long-form post—full of inspiration and ideas. Let’s start with a visit to The Lodhi—and then venture forth.




The New Modern India 

The Lodhi hotel, where I stay when I’m in Delhi, is dramatic and surprising. It’s modern India and it’s superbly managed. The architect, Kerry Hill, embraced the modern essence of Indian design influences—and gave the stone buildings a modernist attitude. The architecture—with tall verticals, is both a nod to the classical silhouettes of centuries-old palaces, and a deep recognition of the powerful force of modernism in contemporary Indian architecture.

An ethereal Meier-modern new hotel with a serene garden setting and elegantly delineated architecture is the new chic place to stay in Delhi. It’s The Lodhi, just five years old, and already a favorite of stylish young Delhi couples and international travelers intent on getting to know the fast-changing and surprising new India.

It’s a favorite hotel for Silicon Valley talent like art collector Komal Shah, a former Yahoo exec who recently joined the Asian Art Museum board. Top interior designers like L.A.-based Michael S. Smith, and leading architect/designer Jean-Louis Deniot, with headquarters in Paris, land there on business trips.


The Lodhi lobby is a contemporary design statement with modern Indian paintings and vivid jolts of orange on club chairs. An over-water restaurant and a terrace beside the pool offer calm respite from vibrant Delhi.

The first impression of The Lodhi is of massive walls of carved marble deployed with precision and superb restraint. An austere and highly refined architectural sensibility is at work here. Pared down and gracefully delineated, the walls of honed ivory-colored stone are reminiscent of the pale carved exterior walls of the Taj Mahal. 




Suites at The Lodhi have a private terrace with a panoramic view with the historic dome of Humayan’s Tomb in the distance. The heated plunge pool is large enough for brief laps followed by repose on the cantilevered chaise longue. The hotel is located near Lodhi Gardens and the neighborhood is leafy and green year-round.

The Lodhi is also very close to historic Lutyens landmarks and the newly designated heritage neighborhood that includes dozens of Lutyens-designed bungalows and government offices.





India is always celebratory and ornate. Many travelers arrive specifically to immerse in the excitement of hallucinogenic hues, and the jangle of music and crowds.

The Lodhi is from another aesthetic, very tranquil and calm. The hotel has a modern style sensibility, one that is truly Indian and poetic, without the razzle-dazzle. It’s discreet and quiet—superbly managed to feel serene and comfortable. 


The Lodhi hotel site includes a large sheltered swimming pool, tennis courts, and outdoor spots for quiet reflection. Guests often use the pool in the cool of evening for refreshing laps.

The hotel architect and designer is Australian Kerry Hill, based in Singapore and Western Australia. He is a master of his craft. The Lodhi feels India modern, but chic and 21st-century. Delhi without a trace of nostalgia.

Hill noted that he referenced India’s great history of palaces and temples and past building traditions through suggestion and association rather than replication, and through the reinterpretation of indigenous building forms as opposed to mimicry.

“We prefer to build upon what is there and to contemporize our understanding of what it can be,” said Hill. “I think of our design for The Lodhi as being current, but filtered through a sieve of traditional values.”








A butler guides guests along an enfilade of silent hallways. In the suite, a graceful bedroom has an efficient series of adjacent wardrobes, luggage stands and dressing tables. Everything in the right place. The scent of fresh tuberoses wafts into the air.

The butler returns with a glass of fresh-squeezed pomegranate juice, the ultimate Indian luxury. There are many other treats.

The hotel is expertly and gracefully co-managed by New Zealand-born former diplomat Robyn Bickford, and her husband, Manav Garewal. They pamper guests, opening up their Black Book for special sources for cashmere shawls, finding rare tickets for an event, taking care of all details. 




In each suite, through tall shuttered doors open to a wide sheltered stone terrace. Each suite has a plunge pool, heated, on a terrace that’s open to the fresh air.

Privacy is perhaps the most precious travel luxury. The Lodhi feels like a private residence. There are no obtrusive signs, and staff greets guests by name.

The hotel is set on 6 acres, has two wings, nine floors, thirty-nine rooms and twenty-eight suites, and there’s a panoply of restaurants, a hair salon, a lap pool, plunge pools, all sheltered by jaali screens to modulate light and intense outdoor heat.

The décor throughout has a very light and airy sensibility of modern Anglo-Indian, with dark exotic wood wall cabinets, bronze bowls filled with pomegranates, stone bowls with fresh tuberose blossoms, everything cohesively modern Indian. All furniture was locally crafted.

The Lodhi, a favorite for auction houses and museum types, recently partnered with the Apparao Galleries of Chennai to showcase contemporary Indian art and sculpture around the hotel. Sharan Apparao, founder and owner of the Apparao Galleries, curates a revolving collection of excellent new artists and points of view.

The Lodhi is a dramatic property, and a haven in fast-paced Delhi.

I can’t wait to return.










In particular, dining choices at The Lodhi are the perfect combination of authentic India dishes and an international selection of contemporary favorites. I particularly enjoy the organic salads at The Lodhi, and sometimes feel like a perfect Mulligatawny soup or a simple sandwich. Bread is baked in the hotel bakery. For long-distance travelers, The Lodhi offers delicious choices. Oh, and be sure to stop at The Bakery to pick up a pretty cupcake or some cookies afterwards.






The Lodhi interiors are enlivened by collections of contemporary art curated by Chennai gallerist and collector Sharan Apparao, who includes witty pieces of pop culture, grand sculptures, fine paintings, abstract pieces and photography among the ever-changing collections.




Sharan Apparao



Shopping in Delhi

I asked two experts on Delhi shopping to check their private listings—and give us an insider look at the best of ‘only in Delhi’ places stylish and chic treasures.

Come with me to check the fantastically inspiring lists from Robyn Bickford, the co-manager of The Lodhi hotel (Robyn has lived in Delhi for four decades) and a precious list from Fiona Caulfield, the founder of the best-selling Love Guides series of guidebooks to Delhi, Jaipur, Goa and Kolkata.

These are the lists to bring with you when you visit Delhi. Give them to your driver and prepare for the best jewelers, a private visit to a shop for the finest handwoven cashmere shawls, and new designer fashion studios, and classic boutiques.


Robyn Bickford’s Favorite Places to Shop for Style:

Anjali Kalia
Email: anjali.kalia@divinedesign.in
My new Discovery: Anjali Kalia is a wonderful designer who makes fresh and innovative and interesting clothes to order in the Indian style but with an international ethos. I have a stunning new summer and party wardrobe with different textiles, embroideries, style and flair. The pants are mostly palazzo style and are a wonderful change from my usual churidhar and much more comfortable. Anjali’s label is ‘Kora’ meaning Pure. Make an appointment—and prepare to plan a beautiful, versatile wardrobe that will also look wonderful when you return home to New York, Paris, London, Los Angeles or San Francisco. A special experience.

Kamayani
Kamayani mobile (0091) 26258680. www.kamayani.in
An incredibly eclectic and passionate collection of textiles and artworks (pichwai paintings) of all kinds-hand embroidered, painted, handwoven, vintage, contemporary pieces including shawls, sari’s, scarves, wall hangings. They are all beautifully crafted—and you will enjoy them for many years. 



Bharany's
14 Sundar Nagar Market.  Bharanys.com
My favorite Delhi jewelers. Very good stones and design-both classic and contemporary and also fabulous antique pieces. Mr. Bharany Senior is an expert on antique shawls and textiles and has a wonderful collection. I suggest making an appointment, and sitting down for a private consultation.

Good Earth
Goodearth.com
Well-known shops, these are a must-visit in Khan Market and Select City Walk, with a finely honed design aesthetic. From homewares, crockery, glassware, bedlinens, décor items, and now a superb range of clothing and furniture. New designs are created each year and themed throughout the range of items on display. The Kashmiri Tarabaksh and Samarkand collections over the past two years have been exquisite. The perfect place to find gifts for others and gifts for yourself! 





Kashmir Loom
C65 Nizamuddin East. Kashmirloom.com
My absolute favorite for handmade Kashmiri shawls and blankets. The indomitable Jenny Housego and the charmingly knowledgeable Asif Ali make a formidable team in design and knowledge. All of very high and consistent quality, the range of shawls is constantly updated with new designs. Very good examples of rare Kani and embroidered shawls and I crave the fine, handwoven Gujjar cashmere blankets and throws. Designs for men and women. Make an appointment and spend hours trying on scarves and shawls. Sip tea and enjoy the beauty, the touch of pure cashmere and exquisite embroidery.

Nappa Dori
www.NappaDori.com
Handcrafted leather items with incredible attention to detail by Gautam Sinha, a fashion graduate. His work is modern and fresh. I adore his tape measures in vibrant colors that look like French macaroons, his photographic images on toilet bags, satchels and briefcases, trunks, notebooks and umbrellas. Sold in Meher Chand Market and at The Lodhi Shop at the hotel, the Nappa Dori range is constantly being expanded. Practical, exciting and very well made.

Raw Mango
Young textile designer, Sanjay Garg, has created Raw Mango, wonderful contemporary textiles in saris, shawls and dupatta’s and now clothes for women. With deep respect for history, craft and the weavers, Sanjay is very popular with the younger generation as well as their mothers. Exhilarating color combinations in silks and cottons. A selection of his range is available at The Lodhi Shop, in the hotel lobby, and other outlets.

Moon River
D16 Defence Colony. www.moonriverstore.com (also on Facebook and Instagram). 
More an experience than just a retail store, Moon River has a well curated range of items including Abraham and Thakore clothes, fashion brands, one-off pieces, collections and exhibitions and their own range of jewelry, Moon River Bijoux. My recent purchases have included a large blue and white bowl with a fish design (my birthsign), a large pichwai paining from Rajasthan, and stunning spinel and pearl earrings. A great find. 






ShahpurJat
This is an exciting new style neighborhood—one for discovery and a view of ‘what’s newest’ in Delhi. New boutiques and ateliers open each week. One of the traditional old villages now merged into Delhi, Shahpur Jat is quite a ‘design hive’ but still with a vivid life and energy. Full of interesting shops and ateliers, this area is well worth a visit. My favorites include Sanskar By Sonam Dubal for clothes, Puneet Jasjuja at Second Floor Studio for his décor and design pieces. Allow 3-4 hours to meander.

Kamala, The Crafts Shop
1 Rajiv Gandhi Handicraft Bhavan, Baba Karak Singh Marg.
www.craftscouncilofindia.org 
A superbly disciplined collection of craft pieces directly from artisans is run by The Crafts Council of India. Selling pottery, textiles, rugs, paper, silver and more. Well worth a visit and to buy. 



The Lodhi Shop
www.thelodhi.com
The Shop at The Lodhi hotel has a strong social awareness program. In the Lodhi Shop there are silk cushions with tiger motifs hand-embroidered by village women in the Sundarbans and commissioned by the Wildlife Protection Society of India to raise funds for tiger conservation. Clutches woven with Pulkari embroidery in the villages of Punjab make great gifts. Other changing exhibits ensure that there is always something new to discover. Jewelry, menswear, books, décor, pillows, and women’s tunics and dresses, as well as shawls and scarves.


Compiled by Robyn Bickford and Manav Garewal
Joint General Managers
The Lodhi



Fiona Caulfield's Favorite Jewelers

Fiona Caulfield is an India expert I admire. She has been based in India since 2004 and is the creator of the acclaimed Love Travel Guides. These handcrafted books are the only luxury guides for India. The 4th edition of Love Jaipur, Rajasthan, was released in January 2015. Fiona contributes to the world’s finest travel media and also offers a bespoke concierge service, Love Travel Journeys where she creates extraordinary travel experiences for private clients. www.lovetravelguides.com.


These are the guides I read before I travel to India—the Delhi book and the Jaipur books are my favorites. Fiona checks each location—and in her comments in these books she offers insight, insider tips, notes, advice, and very useful and essential information on locations. Ask your local bookstore, buy them in India, or find them on Amazon.

Fiona Caulfield's Seven Favorite Delhi Jewelers:
Bhagwandass & Son
95 Dariba Kalan, Chandni Chowk (opp the Old & Famous Jalebiwala on Chandni Chowk). Ph: (011) 6538 4693
Established in 1865, this small shop is one of the oldest in Old Delhi and perhaps the oldest jeweler store in the city. Brothers Promod and Jagdish Mehra, are the fourth generation in their family to run this institution, which is famous for fine Kundun and Meenakari (enamel) jewelry with traditional Mughal motifs.

Kanjimull Jewellers
D 30 Defence Colony, 1st Floor. Ph: (011) 4140 3500 
An elite jeweller, that traces it’s history back to 1870, is known for extraordinary stones and an equally extraordinary clientele, including both Indian and European Royalty, as well celebrities such as Jacqueline Kennedy and Margaret Thatcher.

Padma Gems
9A Sunder Nagar Market. Ph: (011) 2435 1513 
The humble retail store belies the grand jewellery created by Mr Arjun Jain, who is the fourth generation in his family to run this business, soon to be joined by his sons. Padma’s clients include the elite families of India and some of the worlds most famous jewelers in New York and Paris. They uniquely control the whole process in house, and the workshop, located above the store, is run by Babu, a 74-year-old karigar, who is in charge of the hundred or so artisans who meticulously hand craft exquisite pieces.

Hanut Singh
A7 West End. Hanut Mob: 98102 87460. www.
hanutsingh.com
Grandson of the late Maharaja Kumar Karmjit Singh of Kapoorthala (who was renowned for his priceless collection of jewels) Hanut Singh creates contemporary works of art (Mughal meets Art Deco) for a star-studded global clientèle including Madonna, Beyoncé and Queen Rania of Jordan. His streamlined style is an effortless blend of Mughal, Art Deco and Art Nouveau. 

en inde
125/126 Meherchand Market. Ph: +91 11 4905 0832. www.
eninde.com
Contemporary jewelry designer Anupman Sukh Lalvani is known for bold statement pieces, mainly hand crafted from steel and incorporating organic materials like jute, wood and shells as well as textiles and antique elements. The gallery showcases jewelry, including the pure gold talisman pieces and a highly curated selection of fashion and homewares.


Olivia Dar
5H, 1st flr, Jungi House, Sharpur Jat. Olivia mob: 99993 86060. www.
oliviadar.com 
French designer, Olivia Dar has been living in India for close to 20 years, creating embroidery for Christian Lacroix and other couture designers. In 2011 she opened a small atelier where she create sexy and chic hand-made jewellery including vibrant collars, cuffs and headbands as well as gorgeous clutches and belts. She also retails in Paris, Rome, Ibiza and St Tropez. 

Silverline
18 Babar Rd, Bengali Market. Ph: (011) 2335 0454 
A Delhi institution, come here for an abundance of well-priced silver jewellery with semi-precious stones. Half of the fun is searching through drawer upon drawer of treasures. They also have a newer more formal store at 7A Khan Market. Ph: (011) 2464 3017. 



Longtime Delhi resident, the author Malvika Singh is a great friend of mine and she is an excellent guide/writer/ reporter on Delhi and other Indian cities.

I recommend her recent book, ‘Perpetual City A Short Biography of Delhi’ which is a personal and informative memoir of Delhi.

Look also for her recent books, ‘New Delhi: Making of a Capital’ and ‘Delhi” Red Fort to Raisina’ and ‘Delhi” India in One City’.

Her books are available in Delhi at Bahrisons book store at the Khan Market. You’ll want all of her books. They are authoritative and beautifully detailed.




I’m obsessed with India—and I’m always collecting India books. I collect biographies, histories, reports, memoirs, overviews, travel books, short stories, researched books like those of William Dalrymple, as well as detective stories by Tarquin Hall (highly recommend), and even a few books of fiction.

For this India edition of THE STYLE SALONISTE I asked the folks at John Sandoe Books in Chelsea, London, to offer their selection. I love it. Print this out—and start collecting. It was compiled by Dan Fenton and John Owen and their colleague Arabella. Thank you, Dan, John and Arabella.






Fiction – recent titles:

Neel Mukherjee – The Lives of Others
A delicate and sensitive family novel set against a backdrop of political tension in 1960s Bengal. Gloriously written.

Damon Galgut – Arctic Summer
The author traces EM Forster’s journey to India, and the places are beautifully evoked.

Amitav Ghosh:
The Sea of Poppies
River of Smoke
Flood of Fire

Elegantly written but with bags of humor, Ghosh’s trilogy is set in Bengal in the early 19th century during the run up to the opium wars.


Classics:

Vikram Seth – Suitable Boy
An epic, immersive read, it tells the story of four families over 18 months in post-partition India. Read it quick before A Suitable Girl comes out next year.

Rudyard Kipling – Kim
Perhaps the classic of Indian colonial writing.

Ruth Prawer Jhabvala – Heat and Dust
Booker winning novel telling the story of a woman going to her trace her grandmother’s connections in Imperial India.

John Masters – Nightrunners of Bengal
A tense, exciting historical novel set during the Indian rebellion of 1857.


Crime:

M.J. Carter – The Strangler Vine
The first of three books with duo Blake and Avery at its centre. An easy but great fun read.

R F Keating – Inspector Ghote Breaks an Egg
Classic of detective fiction set in India.


History/Travel:

William Dalrymple – City of Djinns
A sensitive, and fascinating portrait of the city that Dalrymple has lived in for many years. History and place are brought alive through his, often very funny, anecdotes. All his other books are also worth reading for insights into Indian or Afghan history.

Anne de Courcy – The Fishing Fleet
De Courcy brings Imperial India alive through the stories of the women who were married into its civil service.

Peter Hopkirk – Quest for Kim
Hopkirk vividly recounts his journey retracing Kim’s footsteps across India and seeing how much it has changed.

Charles Allen – Plain Tales from the Raj
Oral history is an oft-mocked genre but it makes for fascinating stories as here in which Allen interviews a huge range of people about their experiences in India before the end of Imperial rule.


The contemporary picture:

Edward Luce – In Spite of the Gods
An important and well-written book about India’s growing importance from its rapidly expanding economy to its tense nuclear relations with Pakistan


Eland:
Fanny Parks – Begums, Thugs and White Mughals, ed. W. Dalrymple
The journal of an Indophile Brit in 19th-Century India makes for tantalizing, compelling and entertaining reading.

John Beames – Memoirs of a Bengal Civilian
These memoirs of a civil servant in India were an extremely luck find in his attic after his death and make a great companion read to Fanny Parkes.

Mark Shand – Travels on My Elephant
A quite wonderful account of a six-hundred mile journey across India on Tara the elephant by the prominent conservationist (and late brother of the Duchess of Cornwall).


Pictorial:

India’s Elephants, ed. Annette Bonnier
Stunning images of elephants both wild and tame across India.

Indian Textiles: the Karun Thakar Collection,
 ed. John Guy
A breathtaking private collection of textiles from across India.

Sultans of Deccan India, 1500-1700: Opulence and Fantasy
The catalogue of a current exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum, this book explains and shows Deccan’s India’s important place in Indian and world culture


Reference:

Hobson-Jobson: The Definitive Glossary of British India by Sir Henry Yule;
Compiled in 1886 as a glossary of Indian terms, the book’s enduring entertainment value can be found in Yule’s eccentric and, at times, excessive attempts to trace the etymology of words and phrases commonly heard in the Empire.



India Books I Love — My Library

This book list is dedicated to my dear reader, Julieta…who asked me to suggest some books on India, for lifelong learning.

The more you know, the richer and more rewarding will be your India trip.

I have acres of books on India. I read biographies (Gandhi), history (Dalrymple’s volumes), memoirs (Pamela Hicks), and many Indian fiction writers (the Desai family, Lahiri) and many books on histories of the maharajahs and Indian life, culture, music, architecture and textiles.

I love the books of writers like V.S.Naipaul, as well as Amitav Ghosh, and Jhumpa Lahiri (writing about Indian expatriates in books like ‘The Interpreter of Maladies’)…her writing is exquisite. I also love Kiran Desai (“The Inheritance of Loss) and books by her mother, Anita Desai. And there are the charming writings of R.K Narayan.

You may find the following books of interest: (and of course, if you are going bird-watching or in search of antique textiles, you can easily find very specialized books on every topic.) These are a good start—in no particular order, but recommended highly for excellent background and insight and pieces of the pictures. Generally, the books I favor and have enjoyed are background, in-depth learning, rich detail, research, and factual information always written with grace, charm, and wit.






‘City of Djinns’ by William Dalrymple (2003) is a vivid account of his first year living in New Delhi. He’s now become a favorite historian of the region’s great stories. Dalrymple’s nature is contrarian, and often dyspeptic, but he has a lovely admiration and intense interest/passion for Indian people and history.

‘The Last Moghul’ also by Dalrymple, offers the panorama of one of the last significant rulers and dynasties.

‘Passage to India’ by E.M. Forster (1924) paints a sympathetic and textured account of British/India encounters during the colonial period.

‘At the Court of the Fish-Eyed Goddess, Travels in the Indian Subcontinent’ (which is is now published as The Age of Kali) by William Dalrymple (1998) is a wide-ranging series of essays on Indian life, culture, politics.
A Princess Remembers The Memoirs of the Maharani of Jaipur’ by Gayatri Devi (1996) sketches a romantic view of her childhood, subsequent marriage to the Maharajah of Jaipur, and jetset life. She founded schools for girls and a grade school in Jaipur, and was instrumental in protecting and fostering traditional fine crafts and arts of the region.

‘The Raj Quartet’ by Paul Scott. These are the books on which ‘Jewel in the Crown’, the hit PBS show, was based.) Scott’s writing is wonderfully accomplished and richly sympathetic to all of his characters.




‘Freedom at Midnight’ by Collins and LaPierre. Blockbuster, full of detail, research. A closeup view, with private and upclose knowledge of Gandhi's life and death. Must read.

‘Daughter of Empire: Life as a Mountbatten’ by Pamela Hicks (2011) offers insight into the last days of the Raj—and she was in the center of it all.

‘Indian Summer The Secret History of the End of Empire’ by Alex von Tunzelman (2009). I read this on the way to India, when it first came out. Her research is impressive, and it’s another slice of insight into this complex time of history.

‘Chasing the Monsoon’ by Alexander Frater (1998). Witty English writer sets off to follow the monsoon, one summer. Romantic and charming.




Persephone Books:

I’ve recently been in contact with Francesca Beauman at Persephone Books in London.

Persephone Books is an independent publisher based in Bloomsbury, London. Founded in 1999 by Nicola Beauman, Persephone Books reprints neglected fiction and non-fiction by mid-twentieth century women writers.

I highly recommend these beautifully produced books—that use artful endpapers and vintage/period images on covers. You’ll also want to visit their London shop…small and crammed with great books. These are books to treasure and read, and re-read, and savor. Rare and very special.

Francesca Beauman offered these notes:

‘The Far Cry’ is one of the greatest books ever written about India, you’ll adore it. It is by Emma Smith, and was first published in the late forties. Persephone has now published a new edition. 

India is very close to our hearts here at Persephone Books, probably ever since the founder of the company, Nicola Beauman, write a biography of E.M.Forster and went there for research. The book, E.M. Forster A Biography by Nicola Beauman, explores all aspects of Forster's life, including his intense engagement with India. In fact, the Persephone book bag is made by a women’s collective in India, so we definitely do what we can to support what really is such a wonderful, fascinating country of India that we love so much.



FOR MORE INFORMATION:


The Lodhi Hotel
www.thelodhi.com
Images of The Lodhi Hotel, Delhi, courtesy of The Lodhi Hotel.


Fiona Caulfield Travel Writing
fiona@lovetravelguides.com
Fiona Caulfield’s Love Travel Guides series: www.lovetravelguides.com. You can purchase all of the books, including the latest editions, directly from the company.


John Sandoe Books
www.johnsandoe.com
John Sandoe has been a favorite Sloane Square book shop for many years. This is where the Maharani of Jaipur used to buy her books.


Persephone Books


5 comments:

  1. Dear Diane,
    This is an absolute treasure trove of travels to India. I am so fascinated and amazed as always by your wealth of knowledge. India going to the top of my list right now!

    xoxo
    Karena
    The Arts by Karena

    ReplyDelete
  2. This is amazing! Thanks for sharing!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I was for years dreaming of and now planned a trip to India. Your articles on this magical country will be treasured forever...Grazie!

    ReplyDelete
  4. dear Albarosa-


    I'm so pleased you found this post…

    it is highly detailed…and with this book list and information--your trip will be double and triple and quadruple (…if I may be so bold)…as great.

    You must start reading and collecting these books now…you will want to return to India.

    In Delhi…be sure the go to KASHMIR LOOM and tell them you are a friend of mine…ask for Jenny one of the owners…she is a friend…her shawls are the very very best--and the colors are rather for a WESTERN audience and tend to be what you would wear in Paris or New York or Vancouver or San Francisco…
    happy trails…and keep me posted--DIANE

    ReplyDelete
  5. karena-


    thank you so much for your lovely comment.

    I hope you will follow in my footsteps…and as well want you to start an INDIA BOOKS section of your library to inspire and uplift you.

    INDIA IS GREAT. DIANE

    ReplyDelete