The famous books and authors list is one of the most consistently tested GK topics in UPSC, SSC CGL, SSC CHSL, Banking, Railways, NDA, CDS, and all State PSC competitive exams — questions typically ask which book was written by a given author, or which author wrote a specific title.
This page covers 65+ essential book-author pairs across Indian political figures, freedom fighters, Indian literature, world literature, and economics — covering books by Nehru, Gandhi, Ambedkar, Tagore, APJ Kalam, Arundhati Roy, Salman Rushdie, and global classics by Orwell, Marx, Darwin, and more. All updated for 2026 exam relevance.
⚡ Quick Facts
- Nehru’s prison trilogy: “The Discovery of India” + “Glimpses of World History” (196 letters to Indira) + “Toward Freedom” (autobiography) — all written in prison.
- Gandhi’s autobiography: Full title = “The Story of My Experiments with Truth” (originally in Gujarati: Satya Na Prayogo). Also wrote “Hind Swaraj” (1909).
- Ambedkar’s key books: “Annihilation of Caste” (1936, seminal anti-caste text) + “The Problem of the Rupee” (Columbia doctoral thesis) + “Who Were the Shudras?”
- APJ Kalam books: “Wings of Fire” (co-authored with Arun Tiwari) + “Ignited Minds” + “India 2020” + “The Turning Point.”
- Indian Booker Prize winners: Salman Rushdie (Midnight’s Children, 1981) → Arundhati Roy (The God of Small Things, 1997) → Aravind Adiga (The White Tiger, 2008).
Trap 1 — Nehru’s books: “Glimpses of World History” was written as 196 letters to daughter Indira from prison. “Discovery of India” was written in Ahmednagar Fort (1942–46). “Letters from a Father to His Daughter” is a separate, shorter, earlier set of letters. All three are by Nehru but different books.
Trap 2 — Gandhi’s autobiography title: The full title is “The Story of My Experiments with Truth” (NOT just “My Experiments with Truth”). It was originally written in Gujarati, NOT in English or Hindi.
Trap 3 — Indian Booker Prize: Jhumpa Lahiri won the Pulitzer Prize (not Booker) for “Interpreter of Maladies” (2000). Only Rushdie, Roy, and Adiga won the Booker. “Midnight’s Children” also won the “Booker of Bookers” — no other book has this distinction.
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📚 Famous Books & Authors — Complete List
| # ↕ | Book Title ↕ | Author ↕ | Category | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Discovery of India Most Tested | Jawaharlal Nehru | PM | Written in Ahmednagar Fort (1942–46); inspired TV series “Bharat Ek Khoj”; covers India’s history and philosophy |
| 2 | Glimpses of World History | Jawaharlal Nehru | PM | Written as 196 letters to daughter Indira from prison (1930–33); covers world history from ancient to modern |
| 3 | Toward Freedom (Autobiography) | Jawaharlal Nehru | PM | Nehru’s autobiography; written in prison; personal account of his political journey and philosophy |
| 4 | Letters from a Father to His Daughter | Jawaharlal Nehru | PM | Earlier shorter set of letters; written for young Indira to explain history in simple terms; separate from Glimpses |
| 5 | The Story of My Experiments with Truth Full Title | Mahatma Gandhi | Freedom Fighter | Gandhi’s autobiography; full correct title; originally in Gujarati (Satya Na Prayogo); serialised in Navajivan 1925–29 |
| 6 | Hind Swaraj | Mahatma Gandhi | Freedom Fighter | Written 1909; Gandhi’s philosophy of self-rule and critique of industrialisation; written on ship returning from London |
| 7 | Wings of Fire Autobiography | APJ Abdul Kalam (with Arun Tiwari) | President | Kalam’s autobiography; co-authored with Arun Tiwari (1999); Rameswaram to Missile Man to President; most famous science autobiography in India |
| 8 | Ignited Minds | APJ Abdul Kalam | President | Vision for India’s youth; inspiring India’s next generation toward science and development |
| 9 | India 2020 | APJ Abdul Kalam (with Y.S. Rajan) | President | Blueprint for India as a developed nation by 2020; co-authored with Y.S. Rajan; five areas of development |
| 10 | The Turning Point | APJ Abdul Kalam | President | Sequel autobiography covering his Presidential years; reflections on governance and India’s future |
| 11 | My Presidential Years | R. Venkataraman | President | Memoirs of India’s 8th President; covers his tenure and key political events |
| 12 | My Country My Life | LK Advani | Politics | Autobiography of BJP leader and former Deputy PM; covers his political journey and key events |
| 13 | India Wins Freedom | Maulana Abul Kalam Azad | Politics | Memoirs of India’s first Education Minister; insider account of Independence and Partition |
| 14 | Annihilation of Caste Most Important | Dr. B. R. Ambedkar | Social Reform | 1936; written as conference address (cancelled); self-published; landmark critique of the Hindu caste system; essential UPSC text |
| 15 | The Problem of the Rupee | Dr. B. R. Ambedkar | Social Reform | His Columbia University doctoral thesis (1923) on Indian currency; influenced formation of RBI |
| 16 | Who Were the Shudras? | Dr. B. R. Ambedkar | Social Reform | 1948; examines origin of the Shudra varna; companion to “Annihilation of Caste” |
| 17 | Waiting for a Visa | Dr. B. R. Ambedkar | Social Reform | Autobiographical sketch; personal experiences of caste discrimination; raw first-person account |
| 18 | Gita Rahasya | Bal Gangadhar Tilak | Freedom Fighter | Written in prison (Mandalay); philosophical interpretation of the Bhagavad Gita; Karmayoga perspective |
| 19 | The Arctic Home in the Vedas | Bal Gangadhar Tilak | Freedom Fighter | Theory that the original home of Vedic Aryans was the Arctic region; controversial but historically significant |
| 20 | Poverty and Un-British Rule in India Drain of Wealth | Dadabhai Naoroji | Freedom Fighter | 1901; introduced “Drain of Wealth” theory; statistical evidence of British economic exploitation; Naoroji = first Indian in British Parliament (1892) |
| 21 | India’s Struggle for Independence | Bipan Chandra | History | Standard reference text for UPSC history preparation; comprehensive account of the freedom movement |
| 22 | The Indian War of Independence | V. D. Savarkar | Freedom Fighter | First book to describe 1857 revolt as a “war of independence” (not a “mutiny”); banned by British; published 1909 |
| 23 | Anand Math Contains Vande Mataram | Bankim Chandra Chatterjee | Freedom Fighter | Bengali novel (1882); contains “Vande Mataram” — India’s national song; set during the Sanyasi rebellion |
| 24 | Satyartha Prakash | Swami Dayanand Saraswati | Social Reform | Foundational text of Arya Samaj (1875); “Light of Truth”; advocate of Vedic religion and social reform |
| 25 | The Life Divine | Sri Aurobindo | Philosophy | Sri Aurobindo’s philosophical masterwork; integral philosophy; revolutionary who became spiritual philosopher at Pondicherry |
| 26 | We the People | Nani Palkhivala | Law | Celebrated lawyer’s collection; constitutional law and governance; critique of economic policy; Palkhivala = legendary advocate |
| 27 | Gitanjali Nobel Prize 1913 | Rabindranath Tagore | Indian Literature | Nobel Prize in Literature 1913; “Song Offerings”; devotional poems; originally Bengali, translated to English by Tagore himself |
| 28 | Gora | Rabindranath Tagore | Indian Literature | Novel exploring Indian identity, nationalism, religion, and social reform; set in colonial Bengal |
| 29 | The Home and the World | Rabindranath Tagore | Indian Literature | Set during Swadeshi movement and 1905 Bengal Partition; adapted into a film by Satyajit Ray (1984) |
| 30 | The God of Small Things Booker 1997 | Arundhati Roy | Indian Literature | Booker Prize 1997; debut novel; set in Kerala; explores caste, forbidden love, and family tragedy |
| 31 | The Ministry of Utmost Happiness | Arundhati Roy | Indian Literature | Second novel (2017); 20 years after debut; covers marginalised communities and Kashmir; Pan-India in scope |
| 32 | Midnight’s Children Booker 1981 + Booker of Bookers | Salman Rushdie | Indian Literature | Booker Prize 1981; also “Booker of Bookers” (1993) and “Best of the Booker” (2008); only book with this dual honour; magical realism about 1947 Independence |
| 33 | The Satanic Verses | Salman Rushdie | Indian Literature | 1988; controversial novel that led to a fatwa from Ayatollah Khomeini; banned in several countries including India |
| 34 | The White Tiger Booker 2008 | Aravind Adiga | Indian Literature | Booker Prize 2008; dark satire on class inequality in India; adapted into Netflix film (2021) |
| 35 | The Argumentative Indian | Amartya Sen | Indian Literature | Essays on Indian identity, culture, and rationality; by Nobel Economics laureate (1998) |
| 36 | Development as Freedom | Amartya Sen | Indian Literature | Core text on human development as expanding freedoms; foundational for UN’s Human Development Index concept |
| 37 | A Suitable Boy | Vikram Seth | Indian Literature | One of the longest novels in the English language; post-Partition India; 1993; BBC adaptation (2020) |
| 38 | Interpreter of Maladies Pulitzer (NOT Booker) | Jhumpa Lahiri | Indian Literature | Pulitzer Prize 2000 (NOT Booker); short story collection; Indian-American diaspora; Bengal immigrant experience |
| 39 | Train to Pakistan | Khushwant Singh | Indian Literature | Novel about the 1947 Partition of Punjab; one of the most powerful fictional accounts of Partition violence |
| 40 | Malgudi Days | R. K. Narayan | Indian Literature | Classic short stories set in fictional Malgudi town; adapted into famous Doordarshan TV series; Karnataka |
| 41 | Swami and Friends | R. K. Narayan | Indian Literature | First novel in the Malgudi series; set in colonial-era South India; schoolboy adventures and friendship |
| 42 | Five Point Someone | Chetan Bhagat | Indian Literature | IIT life; adapted into blockbuster film “3 Idiots” (2009); launched India’s mass-market English fiction |
| 43 | The Shadow Lines | Amitav Ghosh | Indian Literature | Explores Partition, national boundaries, and identity across India and Bangladesh; Sahitya Akademi Award |
| 44 | Long Walk to Freedom | Nelson Mandela | World Literature | Autobiography of South Africa’s anti-apartheid leader and first Black President; Nobel Peace Prize 1993 |
| 45 | The Republic | Plato | World Literature | Ancient Greece; foundational political philosophy text; concept of the philosopher-king; Allegory of the Cave |
| 46 | The Prince | Niccolò Machiavelli | World Literature | Renaissance Italy; political realism and statecraft; origin of the term “Machiavellian”; 1513 |
| 47 | Das Kapital | Karl Marx | World Literature | Foundational text of Marxism; critique of capitalism; labour theory of value; 1867; Volume 1 published in Marx’s lifetime |
| 48 | The Communist Manifesto | Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels | World Literature | 1848; “Workers of the world, unite!”; “A spectre is haunting Europe”; foundational socialist text |
| 49 | The Wealth of Nations | Adam Smith | World Literature | 1776; foundational text of modern economics; “invisible hand” concept; free market capitalism; UK |
| 50 | On the Origin of Species | Charles Darwin | World Literature | 1859; theory of evolution by natural selection; revolutionised biology; UK; still relevant to science GK |
| 51 | A Brief History of Time | Stephen Hawking | World Literature | 1988; cosmology for general readers; black holes, Big Bang, time; Cambridge; one of most-sold science books |
| 52 | The Diary of a Young Girl | Anne Frank | World Literature | Holocaust memoir; Amsterdam; written while hiding from Nazis (1942–44); published posthumously by her father |
| 53 | Animal Farm | George Orwell | World Literature | 1945; political allegory on Stalinism; “All animals are equal, but some are more equal”; UK |
| 54 | Nineteen Eighty-Four (1984) | George Orwell | World Literature | 1949; dystopian classic; coined “Big Brother,” “doublethink,” “Newspeak,” “Thought Police” — all tested in GK |
| 55 | To Kill a Mockingbird | Harper Lee | World Literature | Pulitzer Prize 1961; USA; racial justice in Alabama; Atticus Finch; one of most read novels in the English language |
| 56 | The Old Man and the Sea | Ernest Hemingway | World Literature | Nobel Prize in Literature 1954; Pulitzer Prize 1953; Cuba; fishing allegory; short but profound |
| 57 | One Hundred Years of Solitude | Gabriel García Márquez | World Literature | Nobel Prize 1982; Colombia; magic realism; Macondo; Buendía family saga; defining Latin American novel |
| 58 | The Trial | Franz Kafka | World Literature | Czech; absurdist bureaucracy; “Kafkaesque” = term derived from Kafka’s work; published posthumously |
| 59 | War and Peace | Leo Tolstoy | World Literature | Russia; epic of the Napoleonic Wars (1812); 1,225 pages; one of the greatest novels ever written |
| 60 | Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind | Yuval Noah Harari | World Literature | Israel; modern global bestseller; covers evolution of Homo sapiens from Stone Age to present; currently affairs-relevant |
| 61 | Essays on the Gita | Sri Aurobindo | Philosophy | Spiritual commentary on the Bhagavad Gita; integral yoga philosophy; Pondicherry ashram |
| 62 | A Fine Balance | Rohinton Mistry | Indian Literature | Set during India’s Emergency (1975–77); poverty, survival, and dignity; Parsi-Canadian author; Booker shortlisted |
| 63 | Courage and Conviction | General V. K. Singh | Military / Politics | Autobiography of India’s former Army Chief who later became a Union Minister; BJP politician; Rajasthan |
| 64 | My Inventions | Nikola Tesla | World Literature | Tesla’s autobiography; alternating current (AC), induction motor, radio waves; Serbia-born US inventor |
| 65 | The Nation and Its Fragments | Partha Chatterjee | Political Science | Political science classic; nationalism in post-colonial India; Subaltern Studies; Columbia University |
⚖️ Compare Two Authors
📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips
Jawaharlal Nehru wrote three landmark books while imprisoned by the British: “The Discovery of India” (written in Ahmednagar Fort, 1942–46; covers India’s philosophy and history; inspired TV series “Bharat Ek Khoj”), “Glimpses of World History” (written as 196 letters to daughter Indira from prison, 1930–33), and “Toward Freedom” (his autobiography). Mnemonic: “Discovery, Glimpses, Toward” = “Doing Great Things in prison.” A 4th book, “Letters from a Father to His Daughter,” is a shorter, earlier set for young Indira — separate from Glimpses.
Gandhi’s autobiography has a specific full title: “The Story of My Experiments with Truth” — exams often test the correct full title vs the popular short form. It was originally written in Gujarati (Satya Na Prayogo) and serialised in his journal Navajivan (1925–29). Gandhi also wrote “Hind Swaraj” (1909) — written on a ship — which laid out his vision for Indian self-rule and his critique of industrialisation. These are two separate books, frequently confused in exams.
Salman Rushdie → Midnight’s Children (1981) — also won “Booker of Bookers” (1993) and “Best of the Booker” (2008). Arundhati Roy → The God of Small Things (1997). Aravind Adiga → The White Tiger (2008). Mnemonic: “Rushdie, Roy, Adiga” = “Read Really Awesome books” in chronological order. Trap: Jhumpa Lahiri won the Pulitzer Prize (not Booker) for “Interpreter of Maladies” (2000).
“Annihilation of Caste” (1936) — originally a conference address (for Jat-Pat-Todak Mandal, Lahore); the organisers cancelled the event after reading it; Ambedkar self-published it; landmark critique of the caste system. “The Problem of the Rupee” — his Columbia University doctoral thesis (1923) on Indian currency; influenced RBI formation. “Who Were the Shudras?” (1948) — examines origin of untouchability. “Waiting for a Visa” — autobiographical essay on personal caste discrimination experiences.
“Poverty and Un-British Rule in India” (1901) by Dadabhai Naoroji introduced the “Drain of Wealth” theory — providing statistical evidence that British colonialism was systematically extracting India’s economic surplus. This is a critical concept for UPSC and SSC exams. Naoroji was also the first Indian elected to the British Parliament (1892, as Liberal MP for Finsbury Central). He is called the “Grand Old Man of India.”
Nehru’s prison books: “Discovery, Glimpses, Toward” → “Doing Great Things in prison”
Three Indian Booker winners: “Rushdie → Roy → Adiga” = “Read Really Awesome books” (1981 → 1997 → 2008)
Gandhi’s books: “Hind Swaraj (1909) + Experiments with Truth (autobiography 1925–29)” → HS + ET
APJ Kalam’s books: “Wings Ignited India’s Turning” → Wings of Fire + Ignited Minds + India 2020 + The Turning Point
Tagore Nobel: “Gitanjali 1913” → G-1-9-1-3 (Gitanjali, year, Nobel year)
Ambedkar’s key works: “APC-Wait” → Annihilation of Caste + Problem of the Rupee + Cast (Who Were Shudras) + Waiting for a Visa
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“Glimpses of World History” was written by Nehru as 196 letters to his daughter Indira Gandhi between 1930 and 1933 while he was in prison. “Discovery of India” was written later in Ahmednagar Fort (1942\u201346). “Letters from a Father to His Daughter” was a shorter, earlier set of letters written for young Indira.
Arundhati Roy won the Booker Prize in 1997 for her debut novel “The God of Small Things,” set in Kerala and exploring caste, family, and forbidden love. The other Indian Booker Prize winners are Salman Rushdie (1981, Midnight’s Children) and Aravind Adiga (2008, The White Tiger). Jhumpa Lahiri won the Pulitzer Prize (not Booker) for “Interpreter of Maladies” (2000).
“Annihilation of Caste” was written as a presidential address for the annual conference of the Jat-Pat-Todak Mandal (a caste-reform organisation) in Lahore in 1936. The organisers cancelled the event after reading the radical text. Ambedkar then self-published it. It is now one of the most important texts in Indian social thought. “The Problem of the Rupee” was his Columbia doctoral thesis (not this book).
Dadabhai Naoroji, known as the “Grand Old Man of India,” wrote “Poverty and Un-British Rule in India” (1901), which provided statistical evidence that British colonialism was systematically draining India’s wealth. He was also the first Indian elected to the British Parliament (1892, as a Liberal MP for Finsbury Central, London).
“Wings of Fire: An Autobiography of APJ Abdul Kalam” was co-authored with Arun Tiwari and published in 1999. It covers Kalam’s journey from a modest background in Rameswaram, Tamil Nadu to becoming India’s leading missile scientist and eventually the 11th President of India. Y.S. Rajan co-authored “India 2020” (a different Kalam book).
✅ Key Takeaways
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
The most exam-tested books by Indian Prime Ministers are Jawaharlal Nehru’s trio — “The Discovery of India,” “Glimpses of World History,” and “Toward Freedom.” APJ Abdul Kalam, though President (not PM), is the most heavily tested — “Wings of Fire” (co-authored with Arun Tiwari), “Ignited Minds,” and “India 2020” are standard exam questions. Maulana Abul Kalam Azad’s “India Wins Freedom” and LK Advani’s “My Country My Life” also appear regularly.
Three Indian-origin authors have won the prestigious Booker Prize: Salman Rushdie for “Midnight’s Children” (1981), which also won the “Booker of Bookers” (1993) and “Best of the Booker” (2008); Arundhati Roy for “The God of Small Things” (1997); and Aravind Adiga for “The White Tiger” (2008). Jhumpa Lahiri won the Pulitzer Prize (not Booker) for “Interpreter of Maladies” (2000). Vikram Seth’s “A Suitable Boy” was shortlisted but did not win.
Dr. Ambedkar’s most exam-relevant works are: “Annihilation of Caste” (1936) — his landmark critique of the Hindu caste system (originally a cancelled conference address); “The Problem of the Rupee” (1923) — his Columbia University doctoral thesis on Indian currency; “Who Were the Shudras?” (1948) — examining the origins of the lowest caste; and “Waiting for a Visa” — his autobiographical essay on caste discrimination. His magnum opus, “The Buddha and His Dhamma” (1957), written just days before his death, is also occasionally tested.
The books and authors list is tested in almost every competitive exam in India — UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Banking (IBPS/SBI), Railways, NDA, CDS, and all State PSCs. Questions appear in the General Awareness/GK section and typically ask: “Who wrote [book title]?” or “Which book was written by [famous person]?” Books by freedom fighters (Gandhi, Nehru, Ambedkar, Tilak), Nobel Prize winners (Tagore, Amartya Sen), and Presidents/PMs (Kalam, Vajpayee) are the highest-frequency categories. Memorising 50–60 key book-author pairs guarantees consistent marks in this section.