
Till the Last Breath
$8.59

A Touch of Eternity
Out of Stock

of course i love you
$12.09

She Broke Up, I Didn't: I Just Kissed Someone Else!
Out of Stock

Wish I Could Tell You
Out of Stock

Our Impossible Love
$6.89

When I Am with You
Out of Stock

Ohh Yes, I'm Single
$8.99

Now That You're Rich . . . Let's Fall In Love
Out of Stock

World's Best Girlfriend
$12.49 - $18.67

If Its Not Forever
$15.09

Of Course I Love You !
Out of Stock

The Perfect Us
Out of Stock

Pocketful O' Stories
Out of Stock

World's Best Ex-Girlfriend
Out of Stock

Hold My Hand
$15.89

You Were My Crush .. Till You Said You Love Me !
Out of Stock

When Only Love Remains
$9.39

World's Best Boyfriend
Out of Stock

The Boy Who Loved
$8.69

Someone Like You
$7.69

Girl of My Dreams
Out of Stock

The Last Boy To Fall in Love
Out of Stock

Boy With A Broken Heart
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Pocketful O’ Stories: Micro-tales on Unexpected Moments of Love
$13.27

Mere Sapnon Ki Ladki
Out of Stock

The Turning Point
Out of Stock
Durjoy Datta’s fiction returns, again and again, to the moment when romance stops being a daydream and starts behaving like a decision. His titles lean into urgency: breath, forever, impossible, single. They suggest characters who want something badly, say it too late, or say it wrong, and then have to live in the echo. These are books for readers who like emotional momentum, the feeling of turning pages because a conversation is coming, because a message hasn’t been sent, because a choice is gathering weight.
Datta’s books tend to read like they’re moving toward a confession. Not always a grand declaration; sometimes it’s smaller and sharper, the truth you avoided, the sentence you typed and deleted. Wish I Could Tell You signals a story driven by restraint, setting up a gap between feeling and speech, and the pleasure comes from watching that gap narrow, widen, and finally snap. It’s the book you pick up when you want longing with teeth.
Till the Last Breath points toward higher-pressure emotion: love as something tested by time and by the body itself. "Last breath" is blunt, physical language that brings a sense of limit into the room, making every small scene feel louder. Then there’s Our Impossible Love. "Our" makes it shared; "impossible" makes it a fight. The title suggests friction with the outside world and the private stubbornness that keeps two people returning to the same door.
Ohh Yes, I’m Single reads like a line delivered across a table, half defense, half dare. It suggests a book interested in how people perform their relationship status in public, and what’s happening underneath. There’s room here for humor, self-justification, and the awkwardness of being watched by friends, family, and strangers who think they’re owed an explanation. That social awareness changes the stakes: the heart has an audience, and the pressure of that audience shapes every decision.
If Its Not Forever carries an argument inside its own title. It sets a standard, forever, and then dares the story to meet it. Across Durjoy Datta books, "forever" and "last" and "impossible" aren’t just dramatic adjectives. They’re a way of naming the fear underneath many love stories: that what you’re building won’t hold. The titles insist on the question and don’t let it fade into the background.
The reading experience is fast, direct, and emotionally legible. The drama isn’t hidden in symbolism; it’s carried in choices, in timing, in what someone can’t bring themselves to say. If you keep a mental Durjoy Datta all books list because you like following an author’s recurring questions, this body of work circles a few durable ones: What do you owe the person you love? What do you owe yourself? When does patience become avoidance? Pick the title that matches your mood: confession, endurance, defiance, or the complicated freedom of saying you’re single and meaning it.
If you’re looking to buy Durjoy Datta books, you can find great low-cost copies on ThriftBooks.