The book chronicles the relationship of the author's family – her father Rajagopal Desikacharya (commonly D. Rajagopal, 1900–1993), mother Rosalind (1903–1996), and herself – with the Indian philosopher Jiddu Krishnamurti (1895–1986).
Days of our Lives | Private Lives | Jiddu Krishnamurti | The White Shadow | Robotech: The Shadow Chronicles | DJ Shadow | Days of Our Lives | The Shadow | Shadow Cabinet | The Private Lives of Elizabeth and Essex | Batman: Shadow of the Bat | Taking Lives | Moonlight Shadow | Parallel Lives | The Shadow Out of Time | Taking Lives (film) | Storm Shadow | The Shadow Line | The Lives of a Bengal Lancer | The Best Years of Our Lives | Shadow Project | Shadow Leader of the House of Commons | Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer | Dream Brother: The Lives and Music of Jeff and Tim Buckley | The Shadow over Innsmouth | The Murderer Lives at Number 21 | The Lives of Others | The Little Girl Who Lives Down the Lane | Sordid Lives | Shadow Theatre |
The Besant v. Narayaniah Case is a suite filed by Jiddu Narayaniah, father of J. Krishnamurti in 1912 against theosophist Annie Besant for the custody of his son.
He graduated in law from the University of Madras and joined the Mysore service as Assistant Superintendent in 1870.
During his 20s, Krishnamurti began attending the University of Madras, studying psychology, philosophy, mysticism, and the sciences, but never completed a degree, having determined that the answers of the West – to what he considered were essential questions – were no better than those of the East.