Archive | June, 2011

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Chick lit: a Close look

Posted on 29 June 2011 by RK

Chick lit is a genre of fiction which states the issues of modern womanhood, often humorously and lightheartedly. The books in the genre are always in the best selling list. The plots usually consist of women experiencing usual life issues, such as love, marriage, dating, relationships, friendships, roommates, corporate environments, weight issues, addiction, and much more. However, it is different from the typical romance novel genre, as here the heroine’s relationship with her family or friends is often just as important as her romantic relationships.

The word Chick lit was first mentioned in the print in 1988, originally used as slang for course titled “Female Literary Tradition”. The Chick lit heroines are super confident, hip, stylish and career driven. To define the genre in the most general way, chick lit features a female protagonist whose womanhood essentially impacts the plot.

Some of the famous Chick lits adapted into movies/Series are:

Bet Me and Anyone But You by Jennifer Cruise

I Don’t Know How She Does It by Allison Pearson
Bridget Jones’s Diary by Helen Fielding

Sex And The City by Candace Bushnel


Five famous chick lit writers and their famous works:

Helen Fielding: The Bridget Jones’s Diary, The Bridget Jones’s Diary: Edge of Reason

Sophie Kinsella: Shopaholic takes Manhattan, The Gatecrasher

Lauren Weisberger: The Devil Wears Prada Series, Last Night at Chateau Marmont, Weisberger Shoe Box


Meg Cabot: Princess Lessons, Ransom My Heart,Size Doesn’t Matter, Princess In The Spotlight

Candace Bushnel: Lipstick Jungle, Four Blondes, Sex And The City

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INDIAreads Quick Contest 6: Identify the authors!

Posted on 27 June 2011 by RK

This contest’s simple, really. So you love books. What about the people who write them? Do you recognize famous authors? Simply send us the names of the 12 authors in here (in order of course) and 3 winners will be selected through a lucky draw. As one of our entrants pointed out last time, it’s not fair to post answers, so you can mail your responses to customercare@indiareads.com with the subject line INDIAreads Quick Contest 6.

Prizes: You can select your favourite from our bag of (hold your breath) NEW RELEASES!!!! Plus you get an IDNIAreads gift voucher of Rs 200

So hurry, send in your entries now. Contest ends on July 5, 2011.

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Death of A Superhero!

Posted on 25 June 2011 by RK

Do They die really?

The death of an icon- be it on telly, in the comic books or in a novel, normally leads to a whirlwind of emotions and a storm of protests from their ardent followers. I mean that’s what fiction is about right – good triumphing over evil, the main protagonist going through everything and coming out unscathed. That’s what provides hope to millions. That’s half the attraction of fiction- thinks that can’t happen in real life, happen there and they normally end with a happily ever after, and increasingly now, they don’t end. So, even when an author decides that he has had enough of a character and decides to make it a mortal, the audience just refuses to let go. “You are an author, use your imagination and give us more or even give us more of the same, but don’t you dare kill my superhero. ” And so for the comic book sellers, it has become a tried and tested formula. Kill a superhero, generate loads of hype, see sales skyrocketing and then give in to popular demand and bring him back. And then watch the sales go up even higher.

I almost feel that now even the readers know that death in comics or even on telly is often temporary. So when Rowling killed Dumbeldore or Sirius Black, almost every Potter fan was confident that they would return. Rowling stuck to her plot. But not so with others. So today when an icon dies,  the readers feel very little loss, they are simply left wondering how long it will be before their icon is resurrected. The excitement is to see how they are bumped off and how they will be made to return and in what form. Here is a look at the death of some of the important comic and fictional characters.

The 1992, DC comics storyline, “The Death of Superman”, created a lot of buzz around the death of Superman. In the story, Superman is killed in an engaging battle with the machine named Doomsday. Both the contestants succumbed to wounds caused due to fight. The later issues depicted the world’s reaction to Superman’s death in “Funeral for a Friend,” the emergence of four individuals believed to be the “new” Superman, and the eventual return of the original Superman in “Reign of the Supermen!”

In DC Comics’ Batman: RIP: storyline, Batman was apparently killed. The “Final Crisis” storyline revealed that he had survived, only for him to disappear into the time stream. Dick Grayson took on the mantle of Batman, and Batman came back to the present in the “Return of Bruce Wayne” storyline, published about a year and a half after “Final Crisis”.

DC Comics has revived the character of Batwoman with a 21st-century twist: The masked crime fighter is a lesbian socialite. Batwoman made an appearance in the July issue of DC comics called 52, in 2008.
The hero’s real identity is Kathy Kane. Interestingly, the former Batwoman, created in 1956, was also known by the same name. However, The first Kathy was killed off in 1979, murdered by an assassin.

While Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is best known for his Sherlock Holmes stories, even though was not the work he valued most.  In fact Conan Doyle once referred to them as  “an elementary form of fiction”.  He was very proud of his historical novels and considered them some of his finest work. As time went on Conan Doyle found himself more closely identified with Sherlock Holmes to the exclusion of his other works.  “I weary of his name,” he told his mother.

After a visit to the Reichenbach Falls, Conan Doyle contemplated the death site for Sherlock Holmes.  The Adventure of the Final Problem was published in December of 1893 in The Strand magazine.  People were so upset that more than twenty thousand of them cancelled their subscription to The Strand magazine. It took a story of a ghostly hound to inspire Conan Doyle to bring the great detective back.  In 1901 Sherlock Holmes reappeared in “The Hound of Baskervilles. The Hound of the Baskervilles was also first published in The Strand. The magazine’s circulation rose by thirty thousand overnight.

The publisher of the Spiderman series said that Parker’s alter ego, Spider-Man, will finally succumb to one of his most pernicious foes in the final issue of “Ultimate Comics Spider-Man”. He will end up dying, after an epic fight, by the hands of the Green Goblin, on the last issue of Ultimate Comics Spider-Man. Fans of Spider-Man can take a sigh of relief, as the “Ultimate” imprint will have no bearing on Marvel’s bigger universe and Amazing Spider-Man series.

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Happy Birthday Anita Desai!

Posted on 24 June 2011 by RK

Anita Desai

Anita Desai was born on this day to a German mother, and a Bengali businessman, in Mussoorie. She has been shortlisted for the booker prize thrice, the last being for “Fasting, Feasting” in 1999. In 1980, her name was nominated for the booker for her novel “Clear Light of Day”. “In custody” brought in her second booker nomination, in 1984. Desai has been awarded with the Sahitya Academy Award (National Academy of Letters Award) in 1978, for her novel “Fire on the Mopuntain”. The Village by the Sea and Where shall We go this Summer are her other popular works.

Kiran Desai, the Man Booker Prize winner , is her daughter.

On the occasion of her birthday, here is a brief look at one of her acclaimed novel, “Fasting, Feasting”.

World Plain, unmarriageable Uma has failed to outgrow her childhood home. Overprotected and starved for a life, she is surrounded and smothered by her overbearing parents, successful sister Aruna, who has outpaced her by pulling off a ‘good marriage’, and Arun, the family’s disappointment of a son. Eccentric aunts and cousins complete the scene of her claustrophobic existence, with its bitter-sweet treats of puri-alu and barfi s, samosas and fritters; and tragedies, big and small. Across the world in Massachusetts, where Arun has gone as a student, family life in an American suburb is bewilderingly different. The Pattons, who he lives with, appear strange and terrible to a young Indian, far from home. The women don’t appear to cook at all, though they stuff their shopping carts till they run over; the men barbecue huge hunks of meat; their daughter binges on innumerable candy bars. Increasingly, Mrs Patton is desperate to be a vegetarian, like Arun. But what Arun wants most is to be invisible. Moving from the heated hub of a traditional Indian household to the cooler centre of an American one, Fasting, Feasting is a powerful exploration of hunger and plenty, in what is one of Anita Desai’s most socially acute novels.


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Happy Birthday Dan Brown!

Posted on 22 June 2011 by RK

Dan Brown

On the occasion of Dan Brown’s birthday today, we take a look at the main protagonist of his novels. Highly intelligent and skillful, they are often pitted against a sophisticated, well controlled group. These groups are engineered by someone who the protagonist is most unlikely to suspect.

In Deception Point, Rachel Sexton is pursued savagely by the Delta Force, commanded by her boss at NRO, William Pickering.She is at loss of words, as she discovers the man and the motive behind his deadly pursuits. This estranged daughter of Senator Sedgewick Sexton had to fight for her life at the Arctic Circle, while unraveling the mysteries surrounding the NASA discovery.

Robert Longdon is likable, capable, and the stereotypical good guy. He is trustworthy; this trustworthiness makes him stand out in a narrative in which the author questions on the motivations of every major character. In the novels’ many moments of uncertainty, Langdon’s presence is consistently reassuring. He is not your usual detective- an ex scotland yard or FBI agent;  instead he is an academic who has dedicated his life to “symbology”: the reading of symbols in art and culture. Nevertheless, Langdon slips into his role as transhistorical detective with almost unbelievable ease, every time the situation demands. He is not only willing and able to decode a complex puzzle related to the Illuminati, but he is also willing to grapple with an assassin trained since birth to kill. In all the three novels, The Da Vinci Code, Angels and Demons and The Lost Symbol the honesty and grit of his character stands out.

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Because Dr Watson Counts: INDIAreads quick contest-5

Posted on 21 June 2011 by RK

So every one remembers Bella or Harry, but what about Cederic Diggory or Roran? Surely Sherlock Holmes wouldn’t be the same without Watson and remember, the serial Karamchand? What would we do without Kitty? So are you amongst the people who just remembers the main characters and forgets the supporting cast? Here’s a short quiz.


Nox : The white Royal Ox

Gryphon

Dame Snap

Rhince

Tertius Fume

Can you name the fantasy book or series to which these characters belong? Please mention the name of the author too. Let’s see if you notice the supporting characters or are simply swept away by the main ones…..

Feluda

Kay Scarpetta

Vittoria Vetra

Alex Cross

Commander Adam Dalgliesh

Name the assistants who worked for these famous detective characters?

Three entries will be selected based on a lucky draw. Winners get to choose their favourite title from our bag of bestsellers. And there’s more! A gift voucher coupon worth Rs 200.

So hurry, and send in your answers. You can post them here, leave them on the INDIAreads facebook page or email them to ls.puia@indiareads.com

or customercare@indiareads.com

Contest ends at midnight, June 28, 2011. Anybody and everybody living in INDIA can participate. (Just make sure you are not related to any INDIAreads employee. I know it’s mean, but such is life!!!)

Winners will be announced on June 30, 2011.

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Salman Rushdie : quick facts

Posted on 20 June 2011 by RK

Salman Rushdie

  • Salman Rushdie was born on June 19, 1947 in Bombay, India to a middle class Muslim Family.
  • In 1964, his family, responding to the growing hostilities between India and Pakistan, joined many emigrating Muslims and moved to Karachi, Pakistan.
  • Following his graduation from Cambridge, in 1968, he began working in Pakistani television.
  • He first started his career, working as a copywriter for advertising agency Oglivy & Mather.
  • It was while he was with Ogilvy’s that he wrote Midnight’s Children in 1981, before becoming a full-time writer.
  • He was awarded with the Booker Prize in 1981, for his novel “Midnight’s Children”.
  • His style is often classified as magic realism mixed with historical fiction, and a dominant theme of his work is the story of the many connections, disruptions and migrations between the Eastern and Western worlds.
  • His 1988 novel, “The satanic verses”, was the centre of a major controversy. Muslim leaders across the globe, called for his head. Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, the supreme leader of Iran issued a fatwa against him in 1989.
  • In exile, hidden from the public view, he continued writing essays, short stories, novels.
  • He was appointed a Knight Bachelor by Queen Elizabeth II for “services to literature” in June 2007.
  • Seems that Rushdie do not have enough luck in relationships. He  has married four times, his latest wife being American television show-host Padma Lakshmi, with whom he got seperated in 2007.
  • He holds the rank Commandeur in the Ordre Des Arts et dess Letters of France.
  • In 2008, he was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
  • In 2008, The Times ranked Rushdie thirteenth on their list of “The 50 greatest British writers since 1945″.
  • In 1993, Rushdie won the Booker of Bookers, for the best novel among the Booker Prize winners for Fiction awarded at its 25th anniversary.
  • In 2008, The best of Booker was awarded to Rushdie to commemorate the Booker Prize’s 40th anniversary, winner by public vote.


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Happy Birthday Joyce Carol Oates

Posted on 16 June 2011 by RK

Joyce Carol Oates

Joyce Carol Oates is a renowned Pulitzer nominated American author. Besides being a novelist, she is also a prolific short story writer, playwright, poet, literary critic, professor and editor. She is the recipient of the O’ Henry Award as well as the National book award. In 2010, she has been honored with the National Humanities medal.

Belle Fleur is one of her popular works.

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Happy Birthday: Dorothy L. Slayers and Audrey Niffenegger

Posted on 13 June 2011 by RK

Today on the occasion of the birthday of Dorothy L. Slayers and Audrey Niffenegger, we bring out their famous quotes:

Dorothy L. Slayers

“A human being must have occupation, of he or she is not to become a nuisance to the world.”

“Death seems to provide the minds of the Anglo-Saxon race with a greater fund of amusement than any other single subject.”

“Every time a man expects, as he says, his money to work for him, he is expecting other people to work for him.”

“The great advantage about telling the truth is that nobody ever believes it.”

“Trouble shared is trouble halved.”

In The Teeth of the Evidence is believed to be her remarkable work of crime fiction.


Audrey Niffenegger ( Famous quotes from “The Time Traveler’s Wife”)

“There is only one page left to write on. I will fill it with words of only one syllable. I love. I have loved. I will love.”

“We laugh and laugh, and nothing can ever be sad, no one can be lost, or dead, or far away: right now we are here, and nothing can mar our perfection, or steal the joy of this perfect moment.”

“I won’t ever leave you, even though you’re always leaving me.”

“Time is priceless, but it’s Free. You can’t own it, you can use it. You can spend it. But you can’t keep it. Once you’ve lost it you can never get it back.”

“The compelling thing about making art – or making anything, I suppose – is the moment when the vaporous, insubstantial idea becomes a solid there, a thing, a substance in a world of substances.”

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Birth Anniversary of William Styron

Posted on 11 June 2011 by RK

William Styron

William Styron (June 11, 1925 – November 1, 2006) was a famous American novelist and essayist. After his 1947 graduation, Styron worked as an editor with McGraw Hill in New York city. He worked his way out to get fired from this job, the fact clearly mentioned in an autobiographical passage of Sophie’s Choice. His first novel “Lie Down in Darkness” won him the prestigious Rome prize. In 1968, Styron won the prestigious Pulitzer Prize for his novel “Nathaniel Nat Turner”. The novel was the fictitious memoirs of the historical Nathaniel Nat Turner, a slave who led a slave rebellion in 1831. “The Darkness Visible”, memoir of madness, took him closer to the readers and broadened his following among them.

Sophie’s choice is his other noted work. In this ambitious bestseller (made into a major motion picture starring Meryl Streep), Styron tells of a young Southerner who wants to become a writer; of the turbulent love-hate affair between a brilliant Jew and a beautiful Polish woman; and of an awful wound in the woman’s past, one that impels Sophie toward destruction.

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