Anoop Judge | Author · Writing Instructor · Former T.V. Host​

Goodreads Giveaway!

Dear Subscribers,

I\’m so pleased to announce that the publisher is giving away 100 copies of my new novel titled THE AWAKENING OF MEENA RAWAT free on Goodreads!

Dressed For A Kill

Yay!!!!

Yippeee!!!

My short story titled Dressed for a Kill was recently published in Rigorous journal. This story is excerpted from my novel (The Awakening of Meena Rawat) to be released on May 27, 2021 by Black Rose Writing press.

Click on the link below for the story:

Finally, Sweet Success!!

It’s official!

I’m beyond THRILLED to announce that I have received an offer of publication for my second novel, a love story about two Dalits (Untouchables) that explores their quest for identity, and the divisions of class and culture over three decades.

An excerpt from this novel was nominated for the Pushcart Prize in 2019.

If I could I would . . .

She squeezes her eyes tightly shut not to let the tears fall. “That day, that moment, if I could have that time back.”

The morning of September 22 had started out innocuously enough. Yes, Javed was crying at the top of his newborn lungs, wanting his early feeding. But that was normal for a two-month baby. She’d fed him, then walked him up and down the tiny apartment, rubbing his back so he’d burp, all the while practicing aloud the words of the scene for the movie she was auditioning for later in the day. She’d been so excited when her agent had called with the opportunity—so few and far between these days ever since she’d had baby Javed. Ninety seconds was all it took to make him, and it was going to take a lifetime to raise him.

Now Nominated for The Pushcart Prize . . .

I don’t know whether to cry or sing for joy!!

The following short story excerpted from the novel I have been working on for the past three years and, recently published in the annual 2019 issue of Green Hills Literary Lantern, has now been nominated for the Pushcart Prize.

Anoop Judge is a blogger and an author, who’s lived in the San Francisco-Bay Area for the past 27 years. As an Indian-American writer, her goal is to discuss the diaspora of Indian people in the context of twenty-first century America.