New Delhi, July 10 -- I fear I would die before I am able to write all the books I have inside me," says Amish Tripathi (he goes by his first name now), on the phone from London, where he has been the director of The Nehru Centre since last year, appointed by the Union government. "This is the only way I can ensure I get all my books out, and don't carry untold stories to my cremation pyre." The reference is to the Immortal Writers' Centre, founded by the best-selling writer, with the help of which he has written and just published his latest novel, Legend Of Suheldev: The King Who Saved India. Set in the 11th century in an India ravaged by Mahmud of Ghazni and his Turkic army, the story is told in Amish's trademark galloping prose. The plo...