Tag Archive | "online book rental"

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How to choose a Book: INDIAreads Quick Contest 4

Posted on 05 June 2011 by admin

Take a pick by Reema Lodha

I used to be a member of this library and at one time I could pick 11 books (that was because I used someone else’s card too). So, how does one pick 11 books…?

Initially, I stuck to paperbacks and very thin ones, so that it was easy for me to carry them home. Later, I realized I finished these thin ones quickly and I needed more. So had to figure out a different strategy.

I switched to picking books from one shelf…but then the problem was that these books were mostly from same author and it became monotonous reading….I needed something different….variety.

Finally I ended up picking every 6th book on the shelf. And unbelievably, I got introduced to Dirk Bogarde. I got to read Queen of crime thrillers, Agatha Christie’s memoir -about her experience during archaeological digs, and many more such gems…

My method of picking books may sound weird. But how do you pick your book?

A note from INDIAreads….

Thank you Reema for the amazing post and a great idea. This will be our INDIAreads Quick Contest 4: Share with us your quirkiest method of choosing/ reading books and win prizes.

This time the prizes will be based on a lucky draw because how do  you rate innovation and personal  habits? 3 winners will be selected.

Last date: June 11, 2011. Lucky draw results on June 13, 2011.

And Reema, in recognition  fo your idea, you get a free gift hamper from INDIAreads :)

The same goes for all our members and book lovers. Share your book experiences, suggest an idea for a contest or just tell us a story that you feel  fellow book lovers would like to read and get a gift hamper from INDIAreads…after all, books are all about sharing :)

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What America is Reading: May 2011

Posted on 02 June 2011 by admin

Ok honestly, how many of you looked at the title of this post and started grumbling about why anyone would want to know what Americans are reading? Well, trust me it’s not cos we are looking up to Big Brother for ideas and guidance. Nope, this is just to get an idea of what books are out in the market, and what nations and nationalities are reading. It can tell us lots about a country, don’t you think? I would love to do such a post on every country and then compare, but figures (which can be very misleading) for others are difficult to come across. So till then, we can start with what is available, no? And you know what I would really like to know? Are we reading the same stuff? So, whatever your nationality, if you come by this post, do tell me and all our other visitors your country and what you are reading currently :)

SO here’s the List for the USA: Source: Publishers’ Weekly, USA Today, Wall Street Journal etc. Order is approximate, not accurate. (The best of the lists that we consulted and there were loads of them, I assure you!!!)

FICTION:

1. 10th Anniversary by James Patterson, Maxine Paetro (mystery/ suspense/ thriller)

2. Water for Elephants: A Novel by Sara Gruen

3. Dead Reckoning by Charlaine Harris

4. The Kane Chronicles, Book 2: The Throne of Fire by Rick Riordan (fantasy)

5. The Help by Kathryn Stockett

6. Buried Prey by John Sandford

7. The Jefferson Key by Steve Berry (mystery/ suspense/ thriller)

8. The Sixth Man by David Baldacci (mystery/ suspense/ thriller)

9. The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest by Stieg Larsson (mystery/ suspense/ thriller)

10. Something Borrowed by Emily Griffin

11. Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins (Fantasy)

12. What Happened to Goodbye by Sarah Dessen (children)

13. Worth Dying For by Lee Child (mystery/ suspense/ thriller)

14. The Search by Nora Roberts (mystery/ suspense/ thriller)

15. Room by Emma Donoghue (short listed for the Man Booker 2010)


NON FICTION

1. In the Garden of Beasts by Erik Larson

2. Lies That Chelsea Handler Told Me by Chelsea’s Family, Friends & Other Victims

3. Does the Noise in My Head Bother You? by Steven Tyler with David Dalton

4.  Bossypants by Tina Fey

5. Seal Team Six by Howard E. Wasdin & Stephen Templin

6. Unbroken: A World War II Story of Survival, Resilience, and Redemption by Laura Hillenbrand

7.  The 17 Day Diet: A Doctor’s Plan Design for Rapid Results by Dr. Mike Moreno

8. Where’s the Birth Certificate? by Jerome Corsi

9. Area 51 by Annie Jacobsen

10. The Dukan Diet by Pierre Dukan

Read anything from the list? Know of anyone reading from this list? Let us know…..

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Quick Contest 3: Seriously Mr Author, what were you thinking?

Posted on 29 May 2011 by admin



It’s Sunday again! Time of yet another INDIAreads quick contest. Before I tell you about this one however, I do have to thank all our participants for their lovely entries…one day I would love to publish them all. They are cute they are fun and they make us look at books, authors and events in a new light. The creativity is refreshing too. And people wonder, why I love my job :)

Enough of my rambling, however. Lets get down to the business at hand – today’s contest. How many times have you read a book and wished you could have a tête-à-tête with the author? How many times have you wanted to shake them and ask, why? Or maybe just wanted to better understand their theory (in the case of non fiction) or characters? Or their plot and why it turned out the way it did? How many times have you wondered about the fate of a character?

Well now’s your chance. Tell us the 2 questions you would like to ask an author. From serious to the absurd, from Shakespeare to J K Rowling, you can ask anyone, anything. You can ask the two questions of the same author or choose two different authors.

Top 3 entries 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 questions. You can post them here, leave them on the INDIAreads facebook page or email them to ls.puia@indiareads.com

or custoemrcare@indiareads.com

Contest ends at midnight, June 5, 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 7, 2011.

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Confessions of a Bookaholic

Posted on 23 May 2011 by admin


Source: http://enotes.wordpress.com/2011/04/05/top-10-true-confessions-of-professors-and-other-literary-types/


So, I love collecting books. I see a good book, especially if it has anything to do with history, politics, world affairs and I just have to buy it. I know that I may never get a chance to read them all, but one can dream right? And just looking at them gives me immense pleasure. I begin each morning by walking around the library, running my hands over books, flipping some open and smiling. I know that at the end of the day (or even in between), I have something to look forward to. My friends and family often complain that the only reason INDIAreads came up is so that I could indulge this book addiction of mine. Every time they call and ask, “So where are you?,” the answer inevitably is, “book shopping.” “Again?” “Hey, that’s my job after all :)

So in my latest shopping spree I came across some great Off the Beaten Track Non Fiction reads (bought 500 in one go :) ). They’ll make their way to the library collection soon enough but here’s a list of a few choice picks. Now take a look and tell me can you really blame me for buying these????

P.s. I don’t know when I’ll get a chance to read and review all of these, so am including external albeit reliable reviews. The once without any information are books which we have already uploaded on the site with all information. Hope you enjoy them!!!!!

1. Conquerors of Time: Exploration and Invention in the Age of Daring by Trevor Fishlock: A completely absorbing read that brings to life the important events and ideas that have shaped our world. It is about “men, animals and machines, about the seafarers, engineers, inventors and trailblazers who enabled the British to hold together a vast empire and the Americans to push their frontiers West.”  http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/2004/feb/14/featuresreviews.guardianreview21

2. Spectre of Violence: The 1857 Kanpur Massacres by Rudrangshu Mukherjee: An illuminating inquiry into the play of power and dominance behind 1857 .
On 27 June 1857, rebels publicly slaughtered over 300 men, women and children of the ‘master race’ at the Satichaura Ghat in Kanpur. On 15 July, a group of women and children who had survived were killed at the Bibighur. Two days later, General Havelock reclaimed Kanpur and Colonel James Neill decimated the rebel population. This sequence of violence has held sway over Indian and British imaginations for generations, and historians and commentators have recounted the massacres with horror.
Locating the massacres in the upheaval which overtook north India in the early nineteenth century, Rudrangshu Mukherjee, an eminent 1857 historian, analyses the nature of the violence. Mukherjee argues that the absence of rebel accounts and chronicles inhibits a telling of their version of the story. What is available are the contemporary accounts of British survivors, diaries of British loyalists and depositions as part of the official report prepared by the British. By reading these sources ‘against their grain’ and by examining the manner in which the evidence was stitched together, Spectre of Violence brings to light fresh directions of inquiry into the events of 1857.

3. The Mammoth Book of War Correspondents: 100 of the greatest war dispatches ever written with contributions from Ernest Hemingway, Stephen Crane, George Orwell, John Steinbeck, Rudyard Kipling, James Cameroon, Leon Trotsky and Max Hastings. “War correspondence is a dangerous job, but someone has to do it. The readers demand it. Need  it. Warfare has changed much since Russell’s day (the first man to use the telegraph in the 1840s to to send dispatches from the Crimean wars.), so has the technology of war journalism from telegraph to sat phone, and live commentary as you watch war-u like on the tube. The readers’ hunger for war news has changed too. It’s even greater. In the information age the one information you cannot do without is Mars’s latest havoc. Somewhere, a war correspondent is dying to give it to you.”  This book contains dispatches from the Crimean war to the Franco-Prussian War, from the American Civil War to the Russian Civil War, from the World Wars to the Korean War, from the Cuban Civil War to Chechnya,  from Bolivia (the last journey of Che Guevara) to Vietnam.

4. The Stuff of Thought: Language as a window into human nature by Steven Pinker: How you use words can determine how your mind works, Steven Pinker explains here. Find out more with this detailed NYT review. http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/23/books/review/Saletan-t.html

5. Deep Water: The Epic Struggle over Dams, Displaced People, and the Environment by Jacques Leslie: There are more than 45,000 of them in the world. They have altered the speed of the planet’s rotation, the tilt of its axis, and the shape of its gravitational field. They influence landscapes and societies. They are dams, and in Deep Water,Jacques Leslie offers an incisive, searching, and beautifully written account of the emerging crisis over dams and the world’s water. Reporting in the tradition of John McPhee and Peter Matthiessen, Leslie examines the crisis through the lives of three people: Medha Patkar, the world’s foremost anti-dam activist; Thayer Scudder, an American anthropologist; and Don Blackmore, an Australian water manager. In each of these engrossing portraits, Leslie shows how dams seduce national leaders with seeming bounties of water and power but end up producing blights on the citizenry and landscape. Deep Water is an eloquent and important book about the water crisis and a startling look at the fate of our planet. (From goodreads.com)

6. Simplexity: Why Simple things become complex (and how Complex things can be made simple) by Jeffrey Kluger: Frustrated by the traffic on narrow bridges? Stunned by the number of buttons on a remote control? Saddened by the lack of basic medical care in the developing world? Kluger (Splendid Solution) makes the modern world comprehensible, analyzing social and technological systems to reveal that “things that seem complicated can be preposterously simple; things that seem simple can be dizzyingly complex.” He compares cells to cities to stock markets, renders quarks and fractals accessible and draws parallels between Wal-Mart and AIDS clinics in Tanzania. Although Kluger is prone to hyperbole, his astonishing discoveries require no exaggeration: the book describes how even the most technologically advanced manufacturing plant is infinitely simpler than a humble houseplant “with its microhydraulics and fine-tuned metabolism and dense schematic of nucleic acids”—and baseball fans will be dismayed to discover that football is, in fact, the more complex of the two games: “the possible number of starting configurations before the play even begins is… 31.4 billion.” Kluger’s findings are likely to incite controversy, confirming his contention that explaining simplicity and complexity is never as straightforward as it seems. (Publishers Weekly, April 2008)

7. Flames of the Chinar by Sheikh Abdullah (Abridged and translated from Urdu by Khushwant Singh): This is the autobiography of Sher-e-Kashmir, Sheikh Abdullah, the man who shaped Kashmir’s destiny.

8. Mountbatten and the Partition of India by Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre: This book contains interviews with Mountbatten, and a selection of papers that were in his possession, explaining and examining Mountbatten’s role in India’s partition.

9. The Europe since Napoleon by David Thomson

10. Marriage, a History: How Love Conquered Marriage by Stephanie Coontz

11. War Made new:  Weapons, Warriors, and the Making of the Modern World by Max Boot: From bronze cannons to smart bombs, this engaging study examines the impact of new weaponry on war by spotlighting exemplary battles, including famous epics like the defeat of the Spanish Armada and the attack on Pearl Harbor along with obscure clashes like the 1898 Battle of Omdurman, in which a British colonial force mowed down Sudanese tribesmen with machine guns. Boot (The Savage Wars of Peace: Small Wars and the Rise of American Power) gives due weight to social context: advanced weapons don’t spell victory unless accompanied by good training and leadership; innovative doctrine; an efficient, well-funded bureaucracy; and a “battle culture of forbearance” that eschews warrior ferocity in favor of a soldierly ethos of disciplined stoicism under fire. These factors flourish, he contends, under a rationalist, progressive Western mindset. The author, a journalist and senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations, enlivens his war stories with profiles of generals from Gustavus Adolphus to Norman Schwarzkopf and splashes of blood and guts. Boot distills 500 years of military history into a well-paced, insightful narrative. (from the Publishers’ Weekly)

By now, we all know that technological and strategic revolutions have changed the face of war, but how many of us also realize how much these innovations have also transformed the world beyond the battlefield? Narrative historian Max Boot contends that advances in military affairs helped create the modern nation, facilitated the growth of European colonial empires, and aided the rise of 20th-century totalitarian governments. Boot’s detail-packed discussion of the impact of military revolutions on the course of modern history makes War Made New one of the most provocative, thought-stimulating books in recent memory (goodreads review)

12. The Power of Myth by Joseph Campbell: Among his many gifts, Joseph Campbell’s most impressive was the unique ability to take a contemporary situation, such as the murder and funeral of President John F. Kennedy, and help us understand its impact in the context of ancient mythology. Herein lies the power of The Power of Myth, showing how humans are apt to create and live out the themes of mythology. Based on a six-part PBS television series hosted by Bill Moyers, this classic is especially compelling because of its engaging question-and-answer format, creating an easy, conversational approach to complicated and esoteric topics. For example, when discussing the mythology of heroes, Campbell and Moyers smoothly segue from the Sumerian sky goddess Inanna to Star Wars‘ mercenary-turned-hero, Han Solo. Most impressive is Campbell’s encyclopedic knowledge of myths, demonstrated in his ability to recall the details and archetypes of almost any story, from any point and history, and translate it into a lesson for spiritual living in the here and now. –Gail Hudson, Amazon.com

13. True as the Stars above: Adventures in Modern Astrology by Neil Spencer: What do Princess Diana, Ronald Reagan, Sylvia Plath and Ted Hughes, Winston Churchill, William Shakespeare and the leaders of the Third Reich have in common? They all consulted astrologers. Why? How does astrology work, and if scientists like Richard Dawkins go out of their way to rubbish it, why has it never been so popular? Most books on astrology have either been how-to manuals, cheap guides to the year ahead, or forbidding academic tomes on subjects like the transits of Pluto – until now. True as the Stars Above is a irreverent, intelligent defence of astrology, and an examination of the extraordinary role it has played in the past and still plays today. Among some of the revelations in the book: Margaret Thatcher sought astrological advice after the Brighton bomb. A significant number of the world’s major financial institutions have an astrologer or two on their payroll. British intelligence employed an astrologer during WWII because they were convinced Hitler was doing the same. Ronald Reagan’s Chief of Staff (to his fury) was forced to keep a colour coded calendar, with green for good days, red for bad days and yellow for ‘iffy’ days, in line with the views of Nancy’s astrologer. This is astrology demystified, whether it’s the ongoing row over statistical evidence for astrology; the myth of The Age of Aquarius; computer dating by star sign or why Gone With The Wind’s Scarlett O’Hara is definitely an Aries.

14. Beyond the Oxus: the Central Asians by Monica Whitlock

15. The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows: Okay, before you point it out, I know this one’s fiction, but I just had to mention it. Why? Read the synopsis below…..

“. . . I wonder how the book got to Guernsey? Perhaps there is some sort of secret homing instinct in books that brings them to their perfect readers.”

January, 1946: London is emerging from the shadow of the Second World War, and writer Juliet Ashton is looking for her next book subject. Who could imagine that she would find it in a letter from a man she’s never met, Dawsey Adams, a native of the island of Guernsey, who has come across her name in a book?
As Juliet and her new correspondent exchange letters, Juliet is drawn into the world of Dawsey and his friends—and what a wonderfully eccentric world it is. The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society—a book club born as a spur-of-the- moment alibi when its members were discovered breaking curfew by the Germans occupying their island—boasts an outstanding cast of characters, from pig farmers to phrenologists, literature lovers all.
Juliet begins a remarkable conversation in letters with the Society’s members, learning about their lives, their island, their taste in books, and the impact the recent German occupation has had on all of them. Over time, and despite a demanding and dramatic life in London, she finds herself drawn to the self-contained Dawsey Adams, and to the story of Elizabeth, a young woman whose bright spirit and strength live on in the daughter she left behind when she was sent to a concentration camp. Juliet knows she has found the subject of her book, and possibly much more, and sets sail for Guernsey, changing the course of her life forever.

And I could go on and on, after I hand picked every book and each according to me is special….but here’s just a taster….just to explain why I am a compulsive book buyer!!!!!

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INDIAreads Quick Contest 2

Posted on 22 May 2011 by admin

After the overwhelming response to quick contest 1 and the box full of complaints about how unjust it is to have a contest only for a certain age group, we bring you Quick Contest 2. Age no bar. Yes, everyone (living in India) can participate!!!!

If you were to set a date/ meeting between 2 fictional characters, who would they be? Where would you have them meet and why?

Your entries should reach customercare@indiareads.com before midnight, May 31, 2011. Or you can send them to our facebook mailbox.

As long as you are living in India and are not a family member of any INDIAreads employee or related to someone on our review panel, you can participate.

Top 3 entries get to choose their prize from our bag of best sellers.

HAPPY READING and Keep sending in your entries.



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Book Review: The Color Purple by Alice Walker

Posted on 18 May 2011 by admin

Reviewed by Ruth Zothanpuii

The Color Purple written by American author Alice Walker was published in the year 1982. It received the 1983 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the National Book Award and was later adapted into a film.

The Color Purple has also been the frequent target of censors and appears on the American Library Association list of the 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 2000-2009 at number seventeen because of the sometimes explicit content, particularly in terms of violence.

Alice Walker adopted the epistolary style, so we have the account of the story conveyed entirely by an exchange of letters.Walker has Celie write to God, Nettie to Celie and Celie to Nettie. What occurs in these letters is the story of the physical and mental abuse of Black women who are subjugated by their men in both America and Africa during the 1930s.

Celie, the protagonist and narrator of  The Color Purple, is a poor, uneducated, fourteen year old black girl living in rural Georgia. At the beginning of the story we have Celie who starts writing letters to God as her sense of shame is great and thinks that she can only write to God and has no other way to express her feelings. These letters are written in a voice that uses raw realism – the only language an uneducated girl of fourteen years old would know to convey the facts of her life. The only sentences outside the letters are the first two:“You better not never tell nobody but God. It’d kill your mammy.”

Celie’s stepfather, Alphonso, beats and rapes her; he impregnates Celie twice and later steals and presumably kills both the children.She  is married off to Mr. _____ , a widower on the condition that she take care of his four unruly children, tend his house and be available to him for sex. Her husband following the custom of his race, thrashes her often in order to subdue her and keep her under control.  By illustrating such incidents, Walker draws the attention of modern women. For instance, in some society men inflict physical wounds on women, but in other societies men inflict psychological wounds on women.

Nettie, the younger sister of Celie, whose fate holds an opposite direction joins a missionary family who encourage her to read and learn; something Celie (the heroine) pines for. Nettie later goes to Africa with the missionary family. Both the sisters are estranged from one another for most of their adult lives, yet their devotion as sisters continues, and, without even knowing whether the other is alive, their mutual and unconditional love sustains them.

The interesting part in reading this novel is that while the novel traces the lives of both sisters over a period of decades, it provides us with an innumerable opportunities for thoughtful classroom discussion. For instance, the popular concept of God versus Celie- Nettie – Shug picture of God later in the novel.

The story brings to life American history, world history, women’s history, civil rights history.  It also focuses on incest, women’s exploration of their bodies and souls, wife-beating and other violence, illustrating mainly the dehumanization of women. Walker’s focus on feminist issues within the black community as well as upon intra-racial violence and oppression places her in a category of writers willing to confront the difficult problems of communities in transition, to complain about the male and female, and parents/child relationships, and to persuade their members to renew their faith in each other for the sake of community survival.

Finally, it is the kind of a story that stays with you even long after you’ve finished reading it. A must read and a must have in one’s own private library.

Rent The Color Purple by Alice Walker from INDIAreads Online Library cum Bookstore. Register now!


























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Book Review: 84, Charing Cross Road by Helene Hanff

Posted on 13 May 2011 by admin

If there is a book that every bookaholic must read, it is this, it is this, it is this.

84, Charing Cross Road – a weird name for a book, don’t you think? I would probably have never picked it up if I was browsing at a bookstore or a library. But this one was recomended by a very dear friend so I rented it out (the perks of working at a library!!!).  After the first two pages I began to seriously question my friend’s taste in books. I mean what would you think if you were to read two letters – one from a customer to a nondescript bookstore asking for cheap, second hand copies of books and the second, the bookstore’s very proper (read British) reply. How exciting or inspiring could it be? I was tempted to call my friend and ask her if this was some kind of a sick joke. You have a bookstore cum library, so there read this. But before blasting her off, I decided to go through a few more pages. And boy, was I rewarded. By page 5 my faith in my friend had been restored. By page or shall I say, letter 7, I was hooked. For the next hour or so I kept reading the correspondence between a quirky American book lover and a small, antiquarian book shop located at 84, Charing Cross Road, London.  Not once did I stop smiling. The book is a sheer delight. Of course, I must apologize for using the word antiquarian here, lest the author – who in case you are wondering is the woman who wrote the letters – takes offense. She categorically stateson page 1 itself that the term scares her.

Yes at first glance, 84, Charing Cross Road is just a collection of letters between a buyer and a seller, but those letters have so much spirit, so much humour and so much warmth in them. They portray a series of beautiful relationships formed between people across the Atlantic who had never met one another and who had only one thing in common -books. Who says books provide fodder only for the mind? They enrich the heart and the soul too. And the letters which start out as straight jacket formal notes that one learns to write in English classes, soon become chronicles of friendship and compassion; a treasury of good natured banter. By the end of the 97 page book you feel as if you know the author, Helene (with an ‘e’ as she points out) really well and you can’t help wanting to meet her to experience her wit and warmth first hand. Who after all sends eggs, ham and even nylons to the families of the bookstore she is buying from, when she herself is on a shoestring budget?

Helene’s letters are a delight – the way she waxes eloquent everytime she receives a good book and blows up Frank Doel, the man who is responsible for procuring her books at Marks and Cohen, whenever there is a delay is hilarious. There’s not much more to say about the book, except that you have to read it to believe it. This is no great piece of literature, just a book straight from a booklover’s heart. A word of appreciation for the editors. They have lett the letters be as is. No grammar checks, no effort to ensure that all’s well with the punctuation. And despite the fact that I get irritated every time I come across a grammatical error in a book, not once did I get cross with Helene or her publishers. By withholding their red pens they have retained the spontaneity of the letters; their very real, very tangible feel. Who, after all, wants to read “perfect” error free letters? Especially letters where you are holding a conversation with the writer, hearing, not reading every word.

Oh and before I wrap this review up, I must confess that I was lucky, the copy available in the INDIAreads library had not just 84 Charing Cross Road but also what can be termed as its sequel, “The Duchess of Bloomsbury Street.” If there was one dream that Helene had, one that crept up time and again in her letters, it was a wish to visit England and Marks and Cohen. The Duchess of Bloomsbury Street is none other than Helene herself and the book is her diary, a blow by blow account of her visit to the land of her dreams for the release of 84 Charing Cross Road. Once again Helene’s candour, her uncensored observations and effusive notes have you smiling all the way. And you realize once again, just how many friends a book can win you.

A definite must read.

Rent/Purchase 84 Charing Cross Road by Helene Hanff from INDIAreads Online Book Store cum Library. Register Now.

** P.S for those of you wondering at the verbose and absolutely informal tone of this review, you have to read the book. There is no way that one can do a critical, formal review of this one!

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Book Review: Love on the Rocks by Ismita Tandon Dhankher

Posted on 06 May 2011 by admin

Looking for an M & B with a good storyline, intrigue and Indian protagonists? Pick up Metro Reads’ latest offering: Love on the Rocks by Ismita Tandon Dhankher. With all the ingredients of a “timepass read” this novel does full justice to Metro Reads’ tagline – ‘fun, fast and fiesty reads.’

Life promises to be a lot of fun for newly wed Sancha when she joins her husband Chief Officer Aaron Andrews on his merchant navy vessel, Sea Hyena. However less than 24 hours on the High seas she realizes that all is not well aboard the ship. Confronted with a series of disturbing occurences, including a theft and a murder, the inquisitive bride sets about unravelling the multiple mysteries. She soon realizes that nothing is as it seems and no one, including her husband or his best friend First Engineer Harsh Castillo, can be trusted. What does a woman in love do under such circumstances?Disclose her suspicions to the investigationg officer or give her hubby the benefit of doubt? And who is the murderer?

After the first few chapters you will begin to have your suspicions, but Dhankher manages to successfully keep you guessing till almost the end. The needle of suspicion keeps pointing to different characters; each time you pat yourself on the back for playing Sherlock , there is a new development. A die hard mystery lover might be able to nail the culprit way before he is revealed, but most readers will enjoy the little twist in the end; not Sheldonesque but nonetheless interesting.

The real strength of this debut novel is the voice that Dhankher provides to virtually all her characters. The story is told not from the point of view of a single person – Sancha. Harsh, Aaron, Raghav (the investigating officer), Popeye (the Captain) – everyone gets their say. This refreshing style provides the reader with an interesting insight into the mind and emotions of human beings, particularly of those who have to stayed away from land and their loved ones for long periods of time.

Dhankher’s writing is engaging, the language colloquial and humour, refreshing. The setting – a merchant navy ship – is new and interesting and the plot reasonably well developed. The book may not qualify as the best mystery novel of the year but it definitely does full justice to the “new genre” that Penguin has sought to introduce. A genre of books that “don’t weigh you down with complicated stories, don’t ask for much time and don’t have to be lugged around.”

It is a book for the youth of today who have neither the time nor the patience to indulge in “heavier” reads. Love on the Rocks may not give you an adrenaline rush and it doesn’t exactly compel you to burn the midnight oil just to get to the end, but that was never the intention of the series. Love on the Rocks sets a comfortable pace; it allows you to pick it up in between your chores and enjoy slices of it. No compulsions, no information…pure, simple entertainment. And it definitely qualifies as a good candidate for a Bollywood potboiler.

All in all a laudable debut novel and a great “light” read. Pick it up the next time you plan to catch a flight or want to unwind after a crazy workday.

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Indian American doc wins Pulitzer for his book on cancer

Posted on 19 April 2011 by admin

This time it’s the Pulitzer. Once again an author of Indian origin, Siddhartha Mukherjee, has taken the literary world by storm. A New York-based cancer physician and graduate of Stanford, Oxford and Harvard, Mukherjee won the prestigious Pulitzer prize in the general non fiction category for his book, The Emperor of All Maladies: A biography of Cancer.

Other finalists in the category were “The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing to Our Brain,” by Nicholas Carr (W.W. Norton & Company), “Empire of the Summer Moon: Quanah Parker and the Rise and Fall of the Comanches, the Most Powerful Indian Tribe in American History,” by S.C. Gwynne (Scribner).

Mukherjee’s book has been described as an “astonishingly lucid and eloquent” chronicle of the deadly disease. It presents a “profoundly humane” biography of the malady, starting from its first documented appearance thousands of years ago.

The Pulitzer citation calls it, “an elegant inquiry, at once clinical and personal, into the long history of an insidious disease that, despite treatment breakthroughs, still bedevils medical science.”

Meanwhile, Jennifer Egan’s “A Visit from the Goon Squad” won the 2010 Pulitzer Prize for fiction and Ron Chernow won the Pulitzer Prize in biography for “Washington: A Life.”

Congratulations Siddhartha Mukherjee!

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The Wandering Falcon: A preview

Posted on 18 April 2011 by admin

The Wandering Falcon by Jamil Ahmad

This  debut novel by a 79 year old retired civil servant from Pakistan is perhaps Penguin’s most interesting release slotted for the year. The Wandering Falcon traces the story of a Tor Baz, a young boy who journeys between tribes. The book is his story and the story of the many people he encounters – men and women who live in a society where honour is the foremost religion.

This collection of interlinked stories is set in the strife torn tribal areas where the borders of Afghanistan, Pakistan and Iran meet.  It chronicles life before the advent of the Taliban. Stark and compelling, the book creates an intimate picture of the tribes- capturing both the hardship and desolation of their homeland and the paradoxes that govern their lives. It takes the reader to world of custom and cruelty, of love and gentleness, of hardship and survival;a fragile, unforgiving world that is changing as modern forces make themselves known. For long this region has been known only for the “terrorism” and “terrorism related” conflicts. For the first time, Jamil, who has served in these areas and travelled extensively through them, acquaints us with the inner dynamics of a society which has incited such fierce emotions the world over.

An excerpt from the book – the story of a Baluch couple who had defied the norms of the tribal society and were being pursued-was read out by Suhel Seth at the Spring Fest in New Delhi last month and the audience was riveted. Suhel, of course, is a greater orator and the perfect person for a book reading, but it was not his rendition alone that enthralled the audience. The excerpt revealed a well written book which was descriptive and yet not overly so; the pace was moderate – not racy like a thriller that gives the reader little opportunity to get acquainted with the characters and the settings and yet, it did not drag.

Definitely a book to look out for this month.

And just in case you are curious about the author: Jamil was born in Jalandhar in 1931 and holds a Bachelor’s degree in Law and Master’s degree in History, both from the University of the Punjab. As a member of the Civil Service of Pakistan beginning in 1954, he served mainly in the Frontier Province and in Baluchistan. He was posted as Minister in Pakistan’s Embassy in Kabul at a critical time before and during the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979. In an interview he admitted that when thought of writing, poetry had been his first choice. It was however, his wife who suggested that he focus on his association with the tribal areas instead. “It was she who  typed the first draft of the handwritten manuscript of The Wandering Falcon on an old typewriter with a German keyboard,” said Jamil.

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