惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

V
Visual Studio Blog
爱范儿
爱范儿
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
雷峰网
雷峰网
V
V2EX
博客园_首页
Engineering at Meta
Engineering at Meta
博客园 - 聂微东
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
GbyAI
GbyAI
H
Help Net Security
A
About on SuperTechFans
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
cs.AI updates on arXiv.org
Blog — PlanetScale
Blog — PlanetScale
W
WeLiveSecurity
云风的 BLOG
云风的 BLOG
D
Docker
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Security Archives - TechRepublic
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
G
Google Developers Blog
A
Arctic Wolf
T
The Blog of Author Tim Ferriss
博客园 - 叶小钗
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
Hacker News: Ask HN
Hacker News: Ask HN
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
奇客Solidot–传递最新科技情报
博客园 - 司徒正美
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
P
Privacy International News Feed
T
Troy Hunt's Blog
T
Tenable Blog
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Exploit-DB.com RSS Feed
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
F
Fortinet All Blogs
D
DataBreaches.Net
B
Blog
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
MyScale Blog
MyScale Blog
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
Security Latest
Security Latest
M
MIT News - Artificial intelligence

Books News - Literary Insights and Reviews | The HinduBusinessLine

Business lessons from the top of the world Of sticky wickets and banking A sweeping silver screen saga Auto and liquor brands remain leading advertisers for FIFA World Cup 2026: TAM Sports A positive look at failure ICAI to prepare new accounting framework for Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanams The cost of over-reliance on antibiotics Vegetable inflation soars, likely to go up further An insider’s autopsy of the hollowing out of Parliament A behaviour-first approach World Cup 2026 helps international fans discover a new side of America Behold the Leviathan: The Unusual Rise of Modern India Tracing the malware path Peeling back Beijing’s grey-zone playbook Eating through the noise A biography that stops at the surface Shyam Srinivasan’s ‘Better Never Stops’ launched in Kochi Tata Elxsi: A turnaround tale well told A mirror and a map for investing Shyam Srinivasan shares lessons from banking and cricket in new book 'better never stops' A guide to creating businesses without VC money A fan’s account of a cricket tour La Liga’s Indian sojourn A life at the hinge of history A heartfelt visual tribute to Atal Bihari Vajpayee Can we eat without devouring the earth? Lessons from a titan of Wall Street Inside Kerala’s bureaucratic mindscape Inside Tesla’s ruthless simplification strategy Stock trading demystified The Algorithm Will Drive. You Need to Know the Road. Calculated exercises of Mercy & Leniency SPNI acquires TV and digital rights for Indian Football League Rethinking the way we decide Rising above life’s storms From ShareKhan to Sher Khan – a tale with filmi twists and turns A temperamental tiger Insight into a historian’s method Delhi’s green heritage Lupin: The company that DBG built Is history on the verge of dramatic change? Children of a lesser God Operation Sindoor: The Untold Story of India’s deep strikes Inside Pakistan South Africa, West Indies cricket teams make their way home after week-long delay India-NZ T20 WC final logs records concurrent viewership of 82.1 crore Sovereignty at a crossroads Unileveraging the India growth story Women, drivers of Tier-2 dynamism The metabolic crisis Cricket fever fuels travel demand as tourists flock to cities playing host to match An expansive view of technology Bazaars of the Mughal era Charting China’s industrial rise Small town India is no longer peripheral Tech firm Bonbloc is official AI partner of Chennai Super Kings A media maverick’s unplugged memoir We Are Our future: Reflections on Life IAF, the sky guards Learning from the migrant migration The sad and sordid saga of Cafe Coffee Day Indian cinema’s defining moment The great healthcare rip-off A nudge to investing How a Bihari entrepreneur bust a few myths Learning to deal with climate anxiety What leaders have been reading in 2025 The power of pivoting Story of a precocious democracy From jugaad to discipline in digital marketing Apple’s walled garden and the battle to break it Sanctions, a bad idea Dubai Sports City, GMR Sports to set up Olympic sports training centre The theatre of e-commerce An action plan and a leadership kit The compassion of Ratan Tata 50 ways to understand Ritwik Ghatak The philosophy of stock market investing An ironical warning against fragmentation Niche Code engaging but a patchy mix of heuristics and anecdotes God’s own country gets a shake-up from within LSC announces launch of the World Squash League The agony and the ecstasy of working in a scale-up How Zomato was built, ground-up Mergers et al: A one stop repository for M&A professionals Of cricket’s great rivalry Travancore tales A General’s life journey told with candour Why great leaders ask great questions Elusive search for the first principles of entrepreneurship Reimagining India’s economy: Building a compassionate, caring society Navi Mumbai airport to see international flights from day 1 of ops Indian banking, decoded A lowdown on the telecom wars Leadership from within A new marketing Upanishad emerges from the trenches
A fearless activist and a rebel for her time
By Parimala S Rao · 2026-05-03 · via Books News - Literary Insights and Reviews | The HinduBusinessLine

Any guesses who the first woman president of the Indian National Congress was? She presided over its Calcutta session in 1917 and was, in fact, British national, political firebrand and supporter of Irish self-rule, Annie Besant. And this is just one of the many avatars that Clare Paterson describes so vividly in The Nine Lives of Annie Besant, the recent biography of a key force behind India’s Home Rule movement and a dominant figure in the Theosophical Society, which celebrated its 150th anniversary last year.

The engrossing life story brings alive one of the most colourful figures of the late 19th and early 20th centuries – an inspirational activist and educator who left her imprint on many schools and colleges, localities and roads across India that are named after her. In recording Annie Besant’s remarkable journey across continents and ideologies, Paterson presents a study in political and spiritual transformation. She shows how Besant’s early activism in Britain laid the intellectual and moral foundations for her later, pivotal role in India’s struggle against British rule.

Early life

Born in 1847, Annie, as she was popularly known in London’s East End, was a revolutionary thinker, swept up on an extraordinary roller-coaster of a life. Losing her father when she was five, she and her older brother were brought up by their mother in a Victorian middle-class family. An intelligent, intuitive and deeply religious young girl, Annie was riveted by tales of the sufferings of early Christian martyrs, writes Paterson. Ironically, this unshakeable faith was shattered after her disastrous marriage, at age 20, to clergyman Frank Besant.

Parting ways from her husband of six years and forced to give up their son to his care, Annie turned breadwinner for her mother and daughter with short-term jobs. As a prolific writer, she was drawn to unconventional thinkers of the time, and became a pamphleteer in the early 1870s. She wrote prodigiously, on vital current issues such as women’s suffrage, unemployment, workers’ rights, corruption, slavery, political reform, the lunacy laws, and much more.

Being a powerful orator, Annie was also a sought-after public speaker, captivating large crowds with her impassioned campaigns for birth control, workers’ rights, and women’s emancipation. Paterson highlights her involvement in freethought circles, her collaboration with politician, radical thinker and proponent of atheism, Charles Bradlaugh, and her willingness to court controversy while defending principle. The legal action and trial relating to her pamphlet on birth control underscore Annie’s courage in challenging state and church authority, and her faith in fearless public engagement.

A series of fiery and impactful articles in her paper The Link in 1888 amplified women match workers’ call for basic rights, and forced the London Trade Council to broker a deal that ensured all their demands were met, including recognition as the Union of Women Matchmakers. Later that year, she was elected a member of the School Board of London, and her commitment to reforming children’s education in that role was no less revolutionary.

Theosophical turn

Annie’s early radicalism, Paterson argues, did not disappear with her later turn toward spirituality; it evolved. Describing her meeting with Helena Petrovna Blavatsky in 1889, Paterson writes, “Madame Blavatsky’s appearance was ramshackle but her personality was electrifying. She smoked incessantly and swore prodigiously. She rejected all accepted norms, from the church to science... It must have been invigorating for Annie to find so powerful a woman at the head of this organisation.”

Annie’s embrace of the Theosophical Society offered a broader framework that accommodated both spiritual inquiry and social reform. This new philosophy’s emphasis on universal brotherhood and Eastern wisdom allowed multiple trajectories to converge, and resonated with her long-standing critique of Western imperial arrogance. She believed that self-government, or Home Rule, required not only political change but also moral, intellectual and cultural renewal.

Indian independence

The account of Annie’s role in India’s Independence movement forms the political core of the book. Paterson captures both the scale of her influence and the tensions inherent in her position as a British-born advocate of Indian self-government, which led to her imprisonment for political activism. When Annie Besant assumed presidency of the Indian National Congress in 1917, Paterson says, she acquired “a huge base among nationalists as well as Theosophists, the sort of support that is every politician’s dream.”

British officials in India and England didn’t know what to make of her but understood that “this formidable woman now at the centre of the imperial picture was refusing to toe the government line,” while occupying “an extraordinary position of power as president of both a new world religion and of the mainspring of Indian nationalism.”

Tasked by his political bosses to assess her risk as a political threat, colonial intelligence officer Sempkins reported from Delhi in November 1917: “It is apparent [...] that Mrs Besant intends to make her year of office a period of the most strenuous political agitation.” An assessment that would, no doubt, have been met with horrified reactions back home. This “diminutive, white-haired lady who had just celebrated her 70th birthday” was making “men of rank across two continents quake in their boots.”

Paterson recognises the contradictions in Annie’s radical politics — her preference for constitutional methods, her unease with civil disobedience, and her eventual marginalisation as nationalist strategies shifted. The book leaves the reader viewing Annie as a bridge between Britain and India, rationalism and mysticism, dissent and institution-building. It is an astonishing portrait of a woman who repeatedly reinvented herself while remaining faithful to the core of justice and service.

The Nine Lives of Annie Besant stands out for the clarity and edgy elegance of Paterson’s prose. She balances colourful narrative with analytical depth, enlivening the text with delightful and wondrous anecdotes. The result is a biography that is both intellectually rigorous and hugely readable.

(The reviewer is an independent editor based in Besant Nagar, Chennai)

Title: The Nine Lives of Annie Besant: The Astonishing Story of a Victorian Rebel

Publisher: Penguin Random House India

Published on May 3, 2026