Top 5 Books On Subhash Chandra Bose That You Should Read
Wed, 31 May 2023
Here are the top 5 Books on Subhash Chandra Bose that you should read
Anuj Dhar's India's Biggest Cover-Up
Long after he was pronounced dead, it is claimed that Netaji Subhash Chandra Bose continued to live a life terrible than death in the guise of a spiritual hermit known as Ghumnami Baba, living in total solitary confinement, penury, and suffering. This great piece of writing provides evidence to back up the data gathered under India's freedom information act, supporting this earth-shattering finding with a succession of evidence. Anuj Dhar has put quite a lot of time and effort into this one.
Subhash Chandra Bose's An Indian Pilgrim: An Unfinished Autobiography
This is Netaji's unfinished autobiography, that is a retrospective self-analysis and thorough description of his life. Showing his inner struggles as a truant student seeking heavenly enlightenment, these serve as a valuable reference point for those who prefer to infer an amoral, fantastic tendency in him from his eventual affiliation with Nazi Germany. Sugata Bose and Sisir K Bose edited the piece.
Bose Sisir K and Sugata Bose’s The Indian Struggle 1920-1942, Subhash Chandra Bose
This one covers the political upheavals of the interwar period, which is further expanded and deepened by Netaji's perspective on major subjects spanning Indian history and a finely carved assessment of Mahatma Gandhi's participation in the same. Netaji, I assume, gave the first copy of this work of fiction to Italian dictator Benito Mussolini.
Maj Gen GD Bakshi’s BOSE An Indian Samurai: Netaji and the INA A Military Assessment
A revolutionary book written by a retired general that aids in evaluating Netaji as a military leadership and India's First Supreme Command. Also included is an attempt to examine the success of the Indian National Army during World War II and its significance in the Freedom movement. This one has a lot of untold Indian history.
Leonard Gordon's Brothers Against the Raj
Netaji and his brother Sarat were two of the most significant figures of the Indian independence movement. This is the authoritative biography of the Bose Brothers, as well as a look at the volatile international politics of the time. Leonardo wrote the book utilising material obtained from archives, records, and over 150 conversations with the brothers' political colleagues and their family members. Through this approach, Gordon has merged empathy and objectivity.