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Subrat SaurabhAuthor of Kuch Woh PalThe author is an Anglo-Indian by birth and of Indo-French-Portuguese roots. She has written and published several short stories in Femina and Women’s Era, a short story named Stone House in More Voices on the Verandah (A CTR Publishing Co, New Jersey) and The Gold Plated Leg posted online via Induswomanwriting.com. She has self-published a book titled Boarding School Buddies. An avid reader widely travelled around India and overseas. She is currently working on a book based on her genealogical roots.Read More...
The author is an Anglo-Indian by birth and of Indo-French-Portuguese roots. She has written and published several short stories in Femina and Women’s Era, a short story named Stone House in More Voices on the Verandah (A CTR Publishing Co, New Jersey) and The Gold Plated Leg posted online via Induswomanwriting.com. She has self-published a book titled Boarding School Buddies. An avid reader widely travelled around India and overseas. She is currently working on a book based on her genealogical roots.
Read Less...Achievements
A heady mix of paranormal tales from India to give the reader goose-bumps, handed down verbally from generation to generation.
Supernatural sightings of female demons, disguised as lovely women, set out to lure unsuspecting young men to their death. Reincarnated spirits born again, ghostly apparitions of dead relatives, haunted houses, grave robbers and spooks arising from their tombs at the stroke of mid-night, local superstition and myths form part o
A heady mix of paranormal tales from India to give the reader goose-bumps, handed down verbally from generation to generation.
Supernatural sightings of female demons, disguised as lovely women, set out to lure unsuspecting young men to their death. Reincarnated spirits born again, ghostly apparitions of dead relatives, haunted houses, grave robbers and spooks arising from their tombs at the stroke of mid-night, local superstition and myths form part of the anecdotes.
These collected stories, were always related to pass the time before going to bed in the days when there were no TVs or cyber activities to serve as distractions. The narrator often was the family patriarch and the audience were generally family members and any visiting guests. The selected settings for listening to the stories were ideal – either on house terraces or front yards of homes amidst the dark shadows of the palms and other trees lit only by starlight or moonlight.
Silence reigned except for the occasional sounds of the hooting of resident owls from abandoned old houses adding to the eerie atmosphere.
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