Bring Your Own Book (BYOB) Party at JustBooks, Sahakarnagar on July 21, 2018 (Saturday)
RSVP on Meetup OR Register on Eventbrite

RSVP on Meetup OR Register on Eventbrite
BYOB Party is back and this time JustBooks Sahakarnagar will be co-hosting it with us.
Have you read a book that you are craving to chitchat about with someone? Have a favorite book that you think everyone would love, if only they knew about it? Want to see what others are reading and have interesting conversations beyond weather, traffic, and real estate?
Then come to the BYOB party on July 21 and talk away! Try to avoid a bestseller and if you have a copy, bring it along and read us a passage. All languages are welcome.
There will be refreshment and swags courtesy Worth A Read.
Venue: JustBooks, No 30, Above G.K.Vale, Behind Ganesha Temple, 13th Main, CQAL Layout, Sahakarnagar-560092
FAQs
So, what really happens at a BYOB Party?
Everyone brings a book and talks about it. Conversations follow and they are good. So are the refreshments!
You can take a look at what happened in some of our earlier parties here:
- Kalaripayattu and Mathematics Graphic Novels @ BYOB Party in May 2018 (Part 1)
- Yiddish, Right to Education, and Elephants @ BYOB Party in May 2018 (Part 6)
- Nuclear War and the Periodic Table @ BYOB Party in March 2018 (Part 2)
- Sleep Burglars, Flying Lizards and Myth – Diving into the Vernacular @ BYOB Party at IISc in January 2018 (Part 3)
- Partition and the Woman @ BYOB Party at IISc in January 2018 (Part 1)
- Of Mathematics and Mathematicians @ BYOB Party in December 2016 (Part 3)
Do I have to be there for the entire duration of four hours?
We aren’t closing doors or locking you in. But the party is best enjoyed if you are there for the entire duration and listen to people talk about a variety of books. Trust us, you won’t know how time flew.
Do I have to bring anything?
Nothing really. But if you have a copy of the book you want to talk about, you might want to bring it in. Other attendees might want to have a look, or you might want to read a paragraph from it.
I am an author. Can I bring a book written by me?
A good writer should be a voracious reader. It would be preferable if you brought a book you really like written by someone else.
Who are the organizers?
Worth a Read and JustBooks Sahakarnagar.
I have more questions. Who do I contact?
Shoot an e-mail to jayajha@instascribe.com.
Okay! I am ready to come. What do I do?
Join our meetup group, RSVP on Meetup, and come over!
If you are not on meetup, you can also register on Eventbrite.
Bhavish spoke about
Sunil spoke about a book called
I added to the list of sad and powerful books by talking about
Roheet spoke about a book that has been described by many readers as chilling.
Piya has been reading books from the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) countries. She spoke about a book called
Chethan spoke about a book called 
Abhishek decided to end the debate once and for all by bringing up a book that dealt with a non-debatable subject — death. This led to a groan from the audience; no prizes for guessing which book is being spoken about.
Divya was tired of the excessive debates too and decided to present a non-controversial story, a true story about an Antarctic expedition called
Apurba is fond of reading remote narratives about obscure places and people. This time she chose a Hebrew writer called Isaac Bashevis Singer who wrote in Yiddish.
Abhaya got a children’s book this time, a delightful read called 
Waseem got a book called 
Vishal spoke about Jules Verne’s
Da Vinci was not everyone’s favorite painter. He may be held in great esteem now but back then during the Renaissance, he had a bad reputation when it came to deliverability, engaged as he was in conversing with mathematicians, building bridges, applying science to painting and learning for the sake of learning. Da Vinci was a visionary – “illegitimate, gay, vegetarian, left-handed, easily distracted, and at times heretical”.
The noisy debates were taken over by the lull of storytelling when Alok spoke about Toni Morrison’s book 
Samarth started the ethical debate with 
The BYOB Party in May started off with graphic novels, a segment of books that is growing in popularity in India. Amruta is a big fan of Indian graphic novels, particularly those that do not glorify mythology too much. She discovered a set of two graphic novels called
Vaibhav, a mathematician, also got a comic, one called