Devyani Onial is National Features Editor at The Indian Express, and heads the Sunday Eye (the paper's Sunday magazine section). She is a long-form journalist known for her deep-dive profiles, cultural features, and reporting from the Himalayan region. Professional Focus Her work is characterized by a strong interest in the arts, history, and environmental issues related to the hills. Her reporting beats include: Himalayan Narratives: Deeply connected to Uttarakhand, she writes extensively on the ecology, history, and politics of the hill state. Biographical Profiles: She specializes in intimate "At Home With" features of legendary figures like Ruskin Bond, Irfan Habib, and Nayantara Sahgal. Cultural Commentary: She explores film, literature, and social shifts, often through a lens of dissent and identity. Recent Notable Articles (Late 2024 - 2025) Her recent portfolio features significant interviews and historical retrospectives: 1. High-Profile Interviews & Profiles "Nayantara Sahgal on the Emergency and her rift with cousin Indira Gandhi" (June 29, 2025): A rare interview with the 98-year-old author at her home in Dehradun. "Ruskin Bond at home in Landour" (April 26, 2025): A look back at the author’s 91-year journey and his views on Landour's transformation into an "Insta destination." "At home with Irfan Habib: The History Keeper" (Jan 25, 2025): A profile of the legendary historian as he reflects on 75 years of the Indian Republic. "Sudhir Mishra on Hazaaron Khwaishein Aisi and his new series on the Emergency" (June 28, 2025). 2. Uttarakhand & The Hills "New Year Postcards: 'Women fought for Uttarakhand…we hope for a safer place'" (Jan 1, 2025): Recounting the 1994 statehood struggle and the current anxieties of activists. "Are Uttarakhand’s pine trees to blame for the fires?" (May 19, 2024): A historical and ecological investigation into the "pine cone" problem in Mussoorie and Landour. "The Purola Story: How an Uttarakhand town discovered 'love jihad'" (June 23, 2023): Exploring how social fault lines are weaponized in small hill towns. 3. Education & Society "All about a girl: The first girl to graduate from a 50-year-old boys' school" (Nov 9, 2024): A feature on Shekinah, the first girl at Colonel Brown, a historic Dehradun residential school. "Old Rajinder Nagar... and what series and films don't show" (July 31, 2024): An analysis of the crushing pressure on UPSC aspirants following the tragic deaths in coaching centers. Signature Beats Devyani is particularly noted for her literary-historical approach. She has written extensively on Jim Corbett, defending his legacy as both a hunter and a naturalist (specifically arguing against the renaming of Corbett National Park). She also curates the "Explained Books" section, recently covering the legacies of the Mughal Emperor Humayun and...

May 18, 2005 01:37 IST
That women in India lag behind men in terms of economic equality is hardly a surprise. But the extent of this divide is surprising enough. A...
Wed, May 18, 2005
April 10, 2005 00:00 IST
It’s a district with the reputation of being the roughest. Tiwari astra shastra, Afzal Arms are just few of the many arms shops that do...
Sun, Apr 10, 2005
March 27, 2005 00:00 IST
There is that predictable stoicness in this karmic tale. But none of the impatience that it often generates. Kunzang Choden’s simple ta...
Sun, Mar 27, 2005
January 30, 2005 00:00 IST
Tokyo Cancelled. That ring of finality, of authority, is confined only to the title. What follow are vaguely unsettling tales, spread over c...
Sun, Jan 30, 2005
January 09, 2005 00:00 IST
A crossover Shakespearean tale on a distant Indian shore. A midsummer night’s dream with tainted revelry, a threatening tempest. In thi...
Sun, Jan 09, 2005
December 26, 2004 00:00 IST
FOR years Arunachal Pradesh’s resident macaque figured only in local lore. But that’s a thing of the past. The stocky short-tailed...
Sun, Dec 26, 2004
December 19, 2004 00:00 IST
THE shift in this wind is a gentle one in a genteel world. Though the change at the time of independence can hardly be described as gentle i...
Sun, Dec 19, 2004
November 28, 2004 02:28 IST
The moon has barely begun its slow march across the sky but the anticipation of tourists here is already shining through. Cleared by the Sup...
Sun, Nov 28, 2004
November 07, 2004 00:00 IST
Decades ago FW Champion’s Camera in Tiger-land and the Jungle in Sunlight and Shadows inspired a generation of hunters to give up the g...
Sun, Nov 07, 2004
October 24, 2004 00:00 IST
Small details of routine lives often weave larger stories. Domestic talk dots Zeenuth Futehally’s Zohra, highlighting the predicament o...
Sun, Oct 24, 2004
October 03, 2004 00:00 IST
A few years of living on the edge can spoil you for life. Suketu Mehta spent two and a half years with Bombay and its desperate clingers ...
Sun, Oct 03, 2004
September 19, 2004 00:00 IST
If Qurratulain Hyder’s Aag ka Dariya was a wide sweep of the subcontinent’s history, My Temples, Too is a particular moment in tim...
Sun, Sep 19, 2004
August 15, 2004 00:00 IST
WHEN Sahdev Vohra joined the Indian Civil Service in 1941, World War II was on. So instead of going to England for his probation, he was sen...
Sun, Aug 15, 2004
August 08, 2004 01:00 IST
Where once there was a bustling town, there is now a silent swamp. In and around it rise bits of coloured concrete. A green wall, a blue one...
Sun, Aug 08, 2004
August 08, 2004 00:00 IST
The elephant may have found little space in Darwin’s On the Origin of Species but it has filled much of literature, art and religion in...
Sun, Aug 08, 2004
July 25, 2004 01:30 IST
The Staines house in Baripada is yet to shake off its lived-in air. The flower vase is in its place at the centre of a dining table that has...
Sun, Jul 25, 2004
July 18, 2004 01:39 IST
Away from the Taj Mahal’s grandeur that inspires a long queue of tourists on a hot Agra summer day, the northern wall of the monument f...
Sun, Jul 18, 2004
July 11, 2004 00:00 IST
YEARS before Gujarat became a damning case of state complicity in violence, there was Muzaffarnagar. An incident that was the turning point ...
Sun, Jul 11, 2004
June 19, 2004 00:00 IST
In the stream of endorsements that Prime Minister Manmohan Singh appears to have attracted, here’s another. Noted economist Jeffrey Sac...
Sat, Jun 19, 2004
June 06, 2004 00:00 IST
This one should not be judged by its cover. Cressida’s Bed comes with this introduction: ‘‘An enthralling adventure story of ...
Sun, Jun 06, 2004
April 11, 2004 00:00 IST
THERE is a tinge of the unexpected in these short stories. But unlike most, Manjula Padmanabhan doesn’t try too hard for that twist in ...
Sun, Apr 11, 2004
March 14, 2004 00:00 IST
Shikar yarns, as everyone knows,’’ wrote Jim Corbett in The Champawat Man-Eater, ‘‘never lose anything in repetition....
Sun, Mar 14, 2004
February 29, 2004 00:00 IST
SOMETIMES too much grief is exasperating, even a bit embarrassing, for those not at the heart of it. Jaishree Misra herself obliquely acknow...
Sun, Feb 29, 2004
January 25, 2004 00:00 IST
IF there is any connecting thread between the narratives that run through The Garden of Earthly Delights, it is fire. A fire that fascinates...
Sun, Jan 25, 2004
January 02, 2004 00:00 IST
To the 17 interns at the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce and Industry (FICCI), everything in India looks familar yet strange. The ...
Fri, Jan 02, 2004



