Nistula Hebbar

Nistula Hebbar is an Indian journalist[1] and Editor-Politics in National Bureau of The Hindu.[2] Nistula previously worked for The Times of India and The Economic Times.[3] Nistula was a senior assistant editor at The Financial Express in New Delhi.[4][5]

Nistula Hebbar
Born17 March 1975 (1975-03-17) (age 45)
Delhi, India
OccupationBook author, columnist
Years active2000 - Present
Known forAuthor of "Kiss and Tell"
Spouse(s)
Kartikeya Sharma
(
m. 1999)

Early life

She is from Mangalore and was born and brought up in Delhi.[6] She studied Bachelor of Arts (honors), Sociology (1993–1996) in Jesus and Mary College, University of Delhi. She has also done Masters in Sociology from Delhi School of Economics.[7]

Nistula Hebbar wrote a Pulp Fiction based book Kiss and Tell in 2012.[8][9] The book is based on a love story of a political journalist and bureaucrat, set in Lutyens' power circuit in Delhi.[10][11][12][13] Nistula has been in the field of Journalism since 2000.[14] Nistula has contributed to two edited books- Cabals and Kings (edited by Aditi Phadnis) and The Lives of Muslims in India(edited by Abdul Shaban).[15]

gollark: SMS, for all its problems, is not proprietary and fairly universally supported.
gollark: Stadia: Because why *not* "buy" games in a way which leaves you locked into one provider who is notorious for randomly killing projects and which makes you pay rent!
gollark: It's a shame that the Internet's become structured so that direct P2P messaging doesn't really work.
gollark: Oh, and even if you're not concerned about privacy Google has a horrible habit of randomly dropping support for products like RCS.
gollark: Or at least that you think that.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.