There’s a paragraph on Jug Suraiya in Tharoor’s essay on his Junior Statesman days that strikes a chord—Suraiya used words that no one else did and readers had to look up the meaning in their dictionaries. Tharoor seems to have taken that pedestal over—he is frequently referred to as India’s Tharoorasaurus. And The Essential Shashi Tharoor is a showcase of all kinds of punditry, from essays to stories, but does not really require a dictionary. It reads the way Tharoor speaks—with nuanced, erudite wit. And it has been adroitly curated, covering various realms of his interest, opening with tributes to the great men he admires, like Nehru and Tagore. It covers the political maelstrom and Hinduism, brings in cricket, swivels to fragments of Tharoor’s autobiography and to his life as a writer.