"Aashiqui" girl Anu Aggarwal tells the fascinating story of her self-discovery, a near-death experience and amazing recovery in her autobiography which also includes details of the men in her life, from millionaire jet-setters to superyogis.
"Anusual: Memoir of a Girl Who Came Back from the Dead", according to Anu, is the story of a girl who was broken into a million pieces but is alive to tell the tale of how, like in a jigsaw puzzle, she brought the separated parts together back again.
It is the story of the dusky Delhi girl who went to Mumbai and became an international model, and then a star with her very first Bollywood movie "Aashiqui" in 1990 only to chuck it all up and join a yogashram in Uttarakhand.
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In the book, published by HarperCollins, Anu says she feels fortunate to "not have left a leaf unturned, or a button unhooked in my exploration of sexuality, sensuality, or just an honest human connect with members of the opposite sex".
About the men in her life, she says "Another time, a different place, sees another love affair. Lovers change. Nothing else is new" and provides a snapshot of these men.
Among them were Anglo-Indian jazz musician Rick "drummed the beat of my heart in unbelievable crescendo-in room- temperature aqua and delicious vegetarian food"; Giorgio Armani supermodel Danielle "woke me every morning to the most sumptuous omelettes and green tea"; Wall Street financier Christopher Welling was a follower of Sri Sri Ravi Shankar and Australian Jewish landowner Harvey had a "childlike enthusiasm for lovemaking".
The other men included Laurent, a French restaurateur and art gallery owner, with whom she had a "long-distance relationship, through phone calls and bated breaths"; architectural firm owner Garry Brown; venture capitalist Pats; tall and young-bodied Iraqi Ere; Roberto, one of the top guys at the Fiat car company in Italy; and the most moneyed guy she ever met, Abdi from Nigeria, who "preferred the most natural sexual act to be performed with both of us standing up straight".