Wednesday, 14 December 2011

I am desperate to read a book: Shahrukh Khan


Superstar Shah Rukh Khan is an avid reader, but amid the promotions of his last release, `RA.One` and upcoming film `Don 2: The King Is Back`, he is missing the joy of catching up on books.

"Desperately seeking a good book to read. Kindle dried up...bookstores out of bounds...heading to Nagpur would have been nice if I had a book," Shah Rukh posted on Twitter.

The actor and his `Don 2` team are beginning their multi-city promotion tour for the film with Nagpur. He also recieved many suggestions for latest books, and asked his Nagpur fans to give him books during his stay.

"Thanks guys and girls keep the suggestions coming...need to immerse myself in books. Been a long time since I spent some time with myself. Enroute to Nagpur...the tour begins for the chase continues film. I really love meeting you all in the garb of film promotions. DON is ON...

"So if you are in Nagpur and have the time I would love it if you get me books...remember to write ur Twitter handle please on the book," added Shah Rukh.

Tuesday, 13 December 2011

'Supermodel' Tyra Banks turns bestselling author with 'Modelland'


Tyra Banks’ debut fiction book, Modelland, has reached number two on the New York Times bestsellers list and number one on the Barnes & Noble charts.

The achievement certainly marks the advent of a journey from being a super model to a super author for Banks.

In a candid interview with New York Daily News, Banks revealed that books are “a work of fiction that honours my love of books and fantasy, and also lets me poke fun at things I’ve seen in the real world… many of the characters will be inspired by some of the models I’ve known, both nice and ``ice’,” the Telegraph reported.

Rumours circulated last week that Tyra`s debut book was to be turned into a film.
Of the rumours of film adaptation the model-turned-author said that she “would love to open up the Modelland casting to the world. I’m looking for an ``everygirl`` to possibly play one of the characters in the story.”

Monday, 12 December 2011

Showcase: The making of an artist


                                                                                                                                By : Swati Daftuar
He is one of India’s best known cartoonists and social chroniclers. And now comes a book that shows us how he got there. The Life of Mario: 1951, published by Architecture Autonomous, is a graphic diary of images and cartoons from Mario Miranda’s life. More than 50 years old, it is a collection of his rib-tickling, tongue-in-cheek art work edited by Gerard Da Cunha. The year 1951 marked a turning point in Mario’s artistic development and in Goa’s own history.
In 1951, Mario De Miranda had just finished university in Mumbai and was on a sabbatical. Born in 1926 in the Portuguese enclave of Daman, Mario belonged to a Goan Roman Catholic family of Saraswat Brahmin origin. His father was the Administrator of Daman and his family a part of the local aristocracy. Consequently, Mario managed to imbibe the best of both Portuguese as well as Goan cultures. This multi-cultural understanding and empathy is clearly manifested in his work.
It is impossible to have read newspapers and magazines in India and not come across examples of Mario’s works. His influences are everywhere, in books, poetry and social commentary. But this book provides us with a peek into his personal life. Included in this volume are scenes from his daily life, which he was in the habit of drawing.
There are gossiping aunties, solemn priests, dances and birthday parties, favourite bars that allowed credit; everything from those years of Mario’s life that would later chart out the path towards his career. These images also show the cartoonist’s trademark style taking shape; the exaggerated line of the bosom and the rosy noses, the strut and bug eyes that would later become his signature style. Flipping through the pages of Mario’s life, you see the artist evolve and find himself within his own work.
All of 25 and free spirited, Mario’s sabbatical in Goa was filled with old friends and cousins out to have fun. They organised clandestine parties and picnics, visited their favourite haunts and hardly had a dull moment. Mario recreates this world, introducing us to hoards of charming and lovable characters.
A keen observer of village politics and human nature, he transforms this book, with his notes, dialogues and vignettes that pepper the images, from a simple chronicle of his life to a richly humorous social satire.
Many have wondered how Mario, with no formal training in art, could draw so spontaneously. Manohar Malgaonkar, whose book Goa was illustrated by Mario, seemed to have hit upon the answer when he said that Mario ‘did not become a cartoonist. He was born a cartoonist.’
(Courtesy : The Hindu)

Monday, 28 November 2011

Book Review : 'Sita's Ramayana' by Samhita Arni & Moyna Chitrakar


The docile and soft Sita of Ramayana may not be a role model for most women today, however, author Samhita Arni in a new graphic novel has brought out the bolder colours of the epic character.
"Sita's Ramayana," a vivid book which retells the ancient Indian epic through illustrations in Bengal's folk art form of Patua, has Sita voicing out her turbulent life, her anger on Rama and various such emotions that have been underplayed in most of the 'sanitised' depictions of the Ramayana.
Arni, who found international acclaim at the age of 12 with her book "The Mahabharatha: A Child's View," collaborated with Patua artist Moyna Chitrakar to portray a Sita that the current generation could identify with. "The book came with the feeling that the kind of Ramayana that I grew up with is where Ram and Sita are like ideal characters, can't really identify with them but are held up as role models superficially.
"Sita's Ramayana comes from folk stories and versions which were sidelined and where we saw a very different Sita, one who has a strong voice, a voice articulating the kind of tragedy that befalls on her," says Arni.
The author was in the capital for the fourth edition of "Bookaroo" book festival which was held in Delhi from November 25 to 27.
Arni's interest in mythology began at a tender age of four with her grandmother s tales and grew further with time spent in Indonesia, Pakistan and Thailand. Her exposure to different cultures also gave her an insight into the varying forms of Ramayana across the world.
"There's a wonderful poem that's written on a wall of a Thai temple where Ravana confesses his love to Sita and how he knows his love will kill and destroy him and yet he loves her. I think it s quite beautiful and creates a different image of these characters and also different image of love," she says.
The 27-year-old writer disagrees with Delhi University's decision to withdraw A K Ramanujan's essay on Ramayana from the history syllabus.
"You should not hinder knowledge and should not blinker yourself. Education is for the sake of expanding knowledge. I don't think we should restrict or prohibit it in anyway because that becomes censorship.
"Obviously, you can disagree with Ramanujan's essay, you can have a conversation about it, you might not like it but that should not stop it from being out there. Different versions of Ramayan are part of our heritage, we should celebrate it rather than push it under the carpet," she says.
Arni, whose book has made it to the New York s best seller, featured in the fourth "Bookaroo" book festival that was held in the national capital from November 25 to 27. Speaking of her experience at the festival, Arni says, "Although my session at the festival was for 12-16 years of age group, children as young as 8 years old had joined. The book is not restricted to any age group or language due to the visual treatment of the subject." Her next book, she says would also be based on the Ramayan but in the setting of 21st century and as a fictional thriller.

Wednesday, 23 November 2011

Stephen King, Haruki Murakami nominated for 'Bad Sex in Fiction'


Stephen King: Ouch!

Famous British journal the 'Literary Review' has nominated certain eminent authors like  Haruki Murakami; master of horror, Stephen King and the twice Booker nominated and Sebastian Barry for its yearly Bad Sex Award, the prize awarded to the worst literary depictions of sexual acts.The Bad Sex Award, now in its 19th year. We bring for our readers certain quotes from those authors books who have been nominated for this year's bad sex awards
Choicest quotes
11.22.63 by Stephen King  (“Her head bonked on the door. ‘Ouch,’I said. ‘Are you all right?’”)
The Final Testament of the Holy Bible by James Frey (“Every part of my body sang some song I had never heard.”)
The Great Night by Chris Adrian. (“His lady lifted to the stars on his impossibly stiff, impossibly elegant cock.”)
On Canaan’s Side by Sebastian Barry (“We got rid of our damned clothes, and clung, and he was in me then.”)
Dead Europe by Christos Tsiolkas  (“My tongue furiously worked the craters.”)
Parallel Stories  by Péter Nádas (“They hit gracefully on this exceedingly advantageous position.”)
Ed King by David Guterson (“At the moment of their mutual climax, Ed made sure Diane was on top.”)
The Land of Painted Caves by Jean M Auel (“It surged up, unti, with volcanic release, it engulfed them.”)
The Affair by Lee Child (“Then faster and harder. Then we were panting. faster, harder, faster, harder.”)
Outside the Ordinary World by Dori Ostermiller (“We’re part of the same organism: some outrageous sea creature.”)
Everything Beautiful Began After by Simon Van Booy  (“Henry reached up her thighs … as though quietly imploring.)
1Q84 by Haruki Murakami  (“A freshly made ear and a freshly made vagina look very much alike.”)
And also : "[Her breasts] seemed to be virtually uninfluenced by the force of gravity, the nipples turned beautifully upward, like a vine's new tendrils seeking sunlight."
And also: “I’m still erect now, and it shows no sign of subsiding. Neither Sonny and Cher nor three-digit multiplication nor complex mathematics had managed to bring it down.”

Saturday, 5 November 2011

'Chapter Eleven', the corporate tale that wasn't


(IANS) Chapter 11, which in legal terms means filing for bankruptcy, is the central theme of this supposed peek-a-boo into the corporate world. The title is apt and justified as it won`t even take you 11 chapters to figure out that the book is a result of clear bankruptcy of ideas.

For starters, it could have done with some sharp editing and generous chopping of the tech lingo, which though simplified still manages to sound like gibberish.

The plot is a done-to-death Bollywood cliché. Virendra Vikram Singh or VVS is your typical small town boy dreaming of making it big one day. The dreams of VVS, a Rajput from Udaipur with exceptional intellect, come true when he lands a job with a Fortune 500 company in Gurgaon with the help of a sleazy college senior who`s now a strings-pulling "fixer" office senior.

The Blackberrys, laptops, corporate suits and king-size breakfasts make for a glamorous entry but soon lose sheen when the company files for Chapter 11.

Heads roll, VVS does a `what-am-I-doing-here` act but the "fixer" senior comes to his rescue, time and again.

Meanwhile, our protagonist naively manages to get into a soup by doing a hacking job for a blue-blooded Rajput from his hometown, finds a place to stay with two women - one of them beautiful with a bell-like voice - and discovers the virtues of Facebooking and coffee guzzling to kill office time.

In between, we`re also subjected to ill-timed flashbacks where VVS is still a student in Delhi University. We`re told, more than once, that he was IIM (Indian Institute of Management) material but the "god-like" influence of the sleazy senior changes the course of his life and puts him on the path of Navy Cuts and Old Monks.

Back to the present, VVS expectedly falls for the girl with the bell-like voice despite a sarcastic wife back home who keeps calling to check if he`s been asking "how was it" there too -- a reference to a question he used to ask her after their passionate act.

In office, he`s been christened "thakur" and is just beginning to make an impression on seniors with acronyms like his when tragedy 1 strikes. A marketing campaign is leaked and all fingers point towards him. Under the impression that he`s innocent, VVS gets the shock of his life when he finds out that he`s been stabbed in the back by the bell-like voice. Tragedy number 2.

Losing all sense of faith and sanity, VVS bursts out with an impromptu, supposedly-brave speech in the office whose customary purpose is to make the protagonist appear like a coming-of-age hero. Unfortunately, it is neither heroic nor does it move, it`s just a never-ending rant.

Contemporary in its voice and setting, what drowns ‘Chapter Eleven’ is the oft-trodden path it takes.

What could have been an insightful, vivid journey of the corporate industry is reduced to an underwhelming and unintelligent drama with one-dimensional characters, uninspiring writing and a storyline that can be predicted just by turning the book over and going through the blurb.

Grace Before My Eyes: A Poem by Mukul Raisinghani


A letter kept beside my sleeping girl
My Grace
My love, as you are about to read this, I just wanted to tell you I kept on looking for hours at you. I was glued to this serene grace of god on your face and trust me each and every moment lasted forever endlessly...
Sitting beside my sleeping grace, sitting beside my sleeping you I just kept on wondering and wondering whether to keep on wondering and feel this eternal beauty of your soul forever endlessly....
Or
Should I paint this splendour of yours on a canvas and immortalise you forever in colours so vivid and exquisite seen or felt never before so that each and every one feels this eternal bliss of paradise....
Or
Should I fill life in these lifeless papers of my diary in reverence of the everlasting serenity of an angel sleeping right beside me, who makes me realise this delight of paradise....
Or
Should I compose a melody so soothing and alluring heard or composed never before that touches each and every soul that hears it in the same way it touches me and makes me feel this rhythm of paradise....
All I wondered was whether to keep this music, lyrics and paintings of
Paradise that resides in you to me or should I tell everyone about these including the heavens above about this paradise of LOVE in the form of a PAINTING coloured with the colours so enchanting never seen before, or a SONNET immortalised with the elixir of ink, or a MELODY so mesmerizing that mesmerizes even the heavens above......
...........
I know it very well no matter how much I wonder and how much I try, Ill never be able to colour my reverence for you on a canvas with perfection like the way God did on the canvas of my life.
I know it very well no matter how much I wonder and how much I try, Ill never be able to present flowers of my words in my reverence for you on a paper like the way God did on the pages of my life.
I know it very well no matter how much I wonder and how much I try ,Ill never be able to create a melody of my reverence for you so soothing and enchanting like way the God composed on the memories of my life.
All I can do is praise and thank the Almighty,
For providing this solace of coldness to my eyes, for filling my life with the music of love, for blessing me with pictures lovely sunsets, filled with rainbows of bliss, and each and everything he bestowed upon me by gifting you......
Sometimes there is only one thing that I wonder, whether you yourself know how charming you are,
Whether you can see what I see in you,
Whether you have the slightest idea of the depth of your beautiful soul,
Whether you know what all you do to me with all those little gestures and those smiles that take my breath away,
Whether you have had the taste of your own eyes, the way they play and the way they talk to me,
Sometimes I really wonder whether you yourself have talked to your own eyes looking into them like the way I do.........
Sometimes all I wonder is whether even God knows the delight of your beauty, does he have the slightest idea of what it feels to be me while looking into your eyes and talking to them, does he knows how it feels to be me as I am sitting beside „ the sleeping you......
As you are sleeping and I am sitting beside you, my Grace!! And looking at your angelic face there is one thing I can say, Everything is there in a name, and it seems to me that “its all about the name”.
Ohhh dear gracious Grace!!! its Gods grace that I can see in you, its Gods grace I can see in my life when I look at you. And all those who have you in their lives, they not only have you they have Gods grace in their lives in form of you, ohhh my grace!!!!
Ohhh baby!!! I am looking at you, the sleeping and dreaming you, with the dreams of pleasant heavens and clouds above. Your eyes that are peacefully and delightfully closed like that of a seashell shining brightly in morning on rhythmic seashore....
And these red lips of yours seems like a bud of a red rose waiting to mesmerise the aura around it and as you smile unconsciously I can see
them blossoming into a beautiful red rose filled with infinite amount of magnificence and heavenly fragrance....
And these hands of yours joined unconsciously seems like a
Bouquet of baby pink roses, all I wish is I could hold them forever and remain forever in awe of you....
Ohh my dear!! with these joined hands and serenity in your closed eyes you seem to be a sweet little kid praying with blissful innocence.......
And as this sunshine falls on your face, trust me you shine brighter than everything that shines, brighter and finer than glowing snow and the Merril. I can feel the divinity of heaven and calm of innocence in you....
And as I touch your cheeks of yours trust me I can tell you I have never felt the softness this way, no feather and no petal can be softer than you my Grace!!!
As I try to keep your lovely and silky hair behind your ears, to me it feels like making way for the sunlight through the leaves of a tree....
Like the shadow of leaves of a tree standing beside a lake and in between the leaves when shines the sun, in the same way my Grace you shine in the morning light and in the same way your grace shines on my smile....
While looking at you I can feel the beauty of heaven and see the soothing innocence, I can feel and see the unseen Love, I can fly without the wings and swim without the fins, I need nothing more than the moment I am living. All I wish is I could stay magnetised to you like this.... Forever, hypnotised and mesmerised the way I am... Forever.
The perfection of the beauty of your soul and perfection of the moment says it all about the existence of an eternal power, it says it all about the presence of God.
“Bow to thy god, who created thee”
“Bow to the god because of you I am sitting beside thee”
As this sun will blossom more, it will bother you, and soon youll wake up but as always you wont let this sun bother you much. Youll shine back at the sun with a radiant smile on your face for you know that love shines in you and this shine of your love makes the light of sun feeble to bother you.
Ahhh!!! How lovely will it be...., watching you spread your arms with a sweet smile on your face, like watching a bud blossoming into a flower in morning light just like the way your smile seems......
“Will it be like blossoming of a flower or will it be like a dove waiting to spread her arms to kiss the sky or an impish butterfly fluttering her vibrant wings while coming out of the cocoon....
I came to wake you up by embracing and cuddling in the sweetest possible way, I wanted to hold you close to my heart and wanted you to feel how it feels to be me in your arms but I am allowing my words to do the talking, to touch your soul.
You listened to my heart and now its time to feel it, My Love!!!, my sweet embrace is waiting for you or rather say I am waiting for your sweet embrace. I have been waiting for this moment for a long time, and now is the time it will come by.
Come oh dear Grace, love of ours is waiting to get flourished in the garden beside the lake. As you are reading this my love, I am waiting by the lake side just for you to come by, and paint my love with your shining colours. As you are reading this I am feeling the most blissful moments of waiting and as I am waiting the nature is singing the songs of immortal dreaming.
Come my dear love!!!
I am waiting to hug you in the laps of nature, with these orangish red flowers sprinkling down from these tall trees and this fragrant and chilling breeze playing with our cheeks.
Come my dear love!!!
As this flowing lake and this charming wind has also started playing a melody so soothing and alluring heard never before,
Come ohhh my dear love!!!
Let me love you in this mesmerizing aura of magnificent love
Come oh my dear love!!!
let me play with your long flowing locks and touch your cheeks like the way these enchanting winds are touching me, come and let me enlighten you the way this aura is enlightening me and the way you have enlightened me....
Come oh dear love!!!
let us walk down these miraculous path of love holding hands in and hands and constant cuddling of love, come let us walk playing with each others fingers,. Come and well fly out to heavens above......
Waiting by the lake, with the sprinkles of flowers from the heavens above, and the drizzling of elixir from the paradise above, and listening to the most melodic melody ever heard created by these alluring winds and enchanting lake...
Come my Grace!!! Come and let me love you this way!!!
Love you more than my words can say....
Waiting endlessly
Mukul Raisinghani

Thursday, 3 November 2011

Book Summary of Chetan Bhagat Combo Of 5 Books



The box set includes the following 5 titles : 


1) Revolution 2020

Once upon a time, in small-town India, there lived two intelligent boys.
One wanted to use his intelligence to make money.
One wanted to use his intelligence to create a revolution.
The problem was, they both loved the same girl.
Welcome to Revolution 2020. A story about childhood friends Gopal, Raghav and Aarti who struggle to find success and love in Varanasi. However, it isn't easy to achieve this in an unfair society that rewards the corrupt. As Gopal gives in to the system, and Raghav fights it, who will win?

From the bestselling author of Five Point Someone, one night @ the call center, The Three Mistakes of My Life and 2 States, comes another gripping tale from the heartland of India. Are you ready for the revolution?

2) The 3 Mistakes of My Life
In late-2000, a young boy in Ahmedabad called Govind dreamt of having a business. To accomodate his friends Ish and Omi's passion, they open a cricket shop. Govind's wants to make money and thinks big. Ish is all about nurturing Ali, the batsman with a rare gift. Omi knows his limited capabiltiies and just wants to be with his friends. However, nothing comes easy in a turbulent city. To realize their goals, they will have to face it all - religious politics, earthquakes, riots, unacceptable love and above all, their own mistakes. Will they make it? Can an individual's dreams overcome the nightmares offered by real life? Can we succeed despite a few mistakes?

3) Five Point Someone
Five Point Someone is a story about three friends in IIT who are unable to cope.

The book starts with a disclaimer, 'This is not a book to teach you how to get into IIT or even how to live in college. In fact, it describes how screwed up things can get if you don't think straight.'Three hostelmates - Alok, Hari and Ryan get off to a bad start in IIT - they screw up the first class quiz. And while they try to make amends, things only get worse. It takes them a while to realize- If you try and screw with the IIT system, it comes back to double screw you. Before they know it, they are at the lowest echelons of IIT society. They have a five-point-something GPA out of ten, ranking near the end of their class. This GPA is a tattoo that will remain with them, and come in the way of anything else that matters - their friendship, their future, their love life. While the world expects IITians to conquer the world, these guys are struggling to survive.

4) One Night At The Call Center
The novel revolves around a group of six call center employees working in Connexions call center in the Delhi suburb of Gurgaon in Haryana. It is filled with a lot of drama with unpleasant things happening to all of the leading characters. The story takes a dramatic and decisive turn when they get a phone call from God.
The novel has also been adapted into a movie.

5) 2 States (The Story Of My Marraige) 
Chetan Bhagat latest book '2 States' is about a boy and girl from two different states of India, who fall in love and want to get married. Of course, their parents don't agree. What happens next is what the book is about.

In India, there are a few more steps:

Boy loves Girl. Girl loves Boy.
Girl's family has to love boy. Boy's family has to love girl.
Girl's Family has to love Boy's Family. Boy's family has to love girl's family.
Girl and Boy still love each other. They get married.

Welcome to 2 States, a story about Krish and Ananya. They are from two different states of India, deeply in love and want to get married. Of course, their parents don't agree. To convert their love story into a love marriage, the couple have a tough battle in front of them. For it is easy to fight and rebel, but it is much harder to convince. Will they make it? 

If you want to read these books you can purchase it from booked4books@gmail.com by placing your order for this 5 book set of Chetan Bhagat's novels. The 5 book set is available at Rs 455 only

Wednesday, 2 November 2011

JK Rowling ‘considered killing Ron Weasley’ in Harry Potter series


JK Rowling has admitted that at one point of time she seriously thought of killing Ron Weasley in the hit Harry Potter series.

Although the author had originally planned not to kill any of the main characters, it was one of the low phases of life during which she pondered upon killing Harry Potter’s sidekick.

“I planned from the start that none of them would die,” the Daily Express quoted her as saying.

“Then midway through, which I think is a reflection of the fact that I wasn’t in a very happy place, I started thinking I might polish one of them off, out of sheer spite.”

“I was thinking: ‘There, now, you definitely can’t have him any more.’”

But she always knew that she would not have taken this decision.

“But I think in my heart of hearts, although I did seriously consider killing Ron, I would not have done it.”

“Anyway, it’s a real relief to be able to talk about it,” she added.

Wednesday, 19 October 2011

Julian Barnes wins Booker Prize

 It was fourth time lucky for British writer Julian Barnes, who won literature`s Booker Prize on Tuesday after a contest that had as many insults, rivalries and bitter accusations as a paperback potboiler.

Barnes, a finalist on three previous occasions who once described the contest as "posh bingo," finally took the 50,000 pound (USD 82,000) prize with ‘The Sense of an Ending,’ a memory-haunted novel about a 60-something man forced to confront buried truths about his past after the unexpected arrival of a letter.

Former British spy chief-turned-thriller writer Stella Rimington, who chaired the judging panel, said the 150-page novel "spoke to humankind in the 21st century."

She said it was "almost an archetypal book of our time" that examined the unreliability of memory and how little we know ourselves.

"It is exquisitely written, subtly plotted and reveals new depths with each reading," she said.

Barnes, one of Britain`s most critically acclaimed novelists, was previously nominated for ‘Flaubert`s Parrot’ in 1984, ‘England, England’ in 1998 and ‘Arthur and George’ in 2005. The 65-year-old writer conceded that "in occasional moments of mild paranoia" he had wondered if forces were working against him ever winning.

"I`m as much relieved as I am delighted to receive the 2011 Booker Prize," he said, thanking his publishers "for their wisdom and the sponsors for their check."

Barnes had been the strong favorite to win the award, attracting half of all bets laid through bookmaker William Hill.

He beat five other finalists. Three were British — Stephen Kelman for ‘Pigeon English,’ AD Miller for ‘Snowdrops’ and Carol Birch for ‘Jamrach`s Menagerie.’ Two Canadian novels rounded out the shortlist: ‘The Sisters Brothers’ by Patrick deWitt and ‘Half Blood Blues’ by Esi Edugyan.

One of the English-speaking world`s most high-profile literary prizes, the Booker is open to writers from Britain, Ireland and the 54-nation Commonwealth of former British colonies. Founded in 1969, it is officially called the Man Booker Prize after its sponsor; financial services conglomerate Man Group PLC.

It always attracts colourful commentary and controversy, but this year`s contest has been particularly combative, with critics accusing the five judges of dumbing-down after Rimington said the finalists had been chosen for readability.

The shortlist drew criticism for excluding some of the year`s most critically lauded books, including ‘On Canaan’s Side’ by Ireland`s Sebastian Barry and "The Stranger`s Child" by Britain`s Alan Hollinghurst.

And a group of writers, publishers and agents announced it was setting up a rival award that hopes to supplant the Booker as English literature`s premier prize.

Literary agent Andrew Kidd, spokesman for the new Literature Prize, said the goal was to create an award "where the single criterion is excellence rather than other factors."

The new prize will be open to any English-language writer whose work has been published in Britain — unlike the Booker, which does not allow American entrants.

On Tuesday, Rimington accused the Booker`s critics of patronizing and insulting both authors and judges.

"What`s a novel for it it`s not to be read?" she said.

She said the judges were pleased that the batch of six finalists was the best-selling in Booker history.

Though only Barnes was an A-list literary name, readers have embraced the novels` pacy plots and varied settings, which range from inner-city London in "Pigeon English" to Gold Rush-era America in ‘The Sisters Brothers.’ ‘Jamrach`s Menagerie’ moves from 19th-century London to a whaling ship, while "Snowdrops" is set in modern-day Moscow and ‘Half Blood Blues’ in prewar Paris and Berlin.

"I thought that the intelligence world was the place for intrigue," said Rimington, former director of the MI5 spy agency. "But that was before I met the publishing world."

Friday, 7 October 2011

Swedish Poet Transtromer Wins Nobel Prize for his surrealistic work


The 2011 Nobel Prize in literature was awarded on Thursday to Tomas Transtromer, a Swedish poet whose surrealistic works about the mysteries of the human mind won him acclaim as one of the most important Scandinavian writers since World War II.

The Swedish Academy said it recognised the 80-year-old poet “because, through his condensed, translucent images, he gives us fresh access to reality.”Transtromer has been a perennial favorite for the 10 million kronor ($1.5 million) award, and in recent years Swedish journalists have waited outside his apartment in Stockholm on the day the literature prize was announced.
( Picture Courtesy : www.benshi.se)

Transtromer’s most famous works include the 1966 “Windows and Stones,” in which he depicts themes from his many travels and “Baltics” from 1974.
His works have been translated into more than 50 languages and influenced poets around the globe, particularly in North America.

Since the 1950's, Transtromer has had a close friendship with American poet Robert Bly, who translated many of his works into English. In 2001, Transtromer's Swedish publishing house Bonniers published the correspondence between the two writers in the book "Air Mail."

Earlier this year, publishing house Bonniers released a collection of his works between 1954 and 2004 to celebrate the poet's 80th birthday.

Born in Stockholm in 1931, Transtromer grew up alone with his teacher mother after she divorced his father — a journalist. He started writing poetry while studying at the Sodra Latin school in Stockholm and debuted with the collection "Seventeen Poems" at age 23.
He received a degree in psychology from Stockholm University and later divided his time between poetry and his work as a psychologist.

Monday, 12 September 2011

Amish Tripathi stays at the top on Best Sellers List


`Poor Economics` by Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo rules the non-fiction set of the bestseller list yet again, while Amish Tripathi takes the first two spots in the fiction list with `The Secret of The Nagas` and `The Immortals of Meluha`.
Fiction

`The Secret of The Nagas`
Author: Amish Tripathi
Publisher: Westland
Market Price: Rs.295

`The Immortals of Meluha`
Author: Amish Tripathi
Publisher: Westland
Market Price:  Rs.195



`Noon`
Author: Aatish Taseer
Publisher: Fourth Estate
Market Price: Rs.499

`A Dance with Dragons`
Author: George R.R. Martin
Publisher: Harper Collins
Market Price: Rs.699

`River Of Smoke`
Author: Amitav Ghosh
Publisher: Penguin
Market Price: Rs.699

`Last Man in Tower`
Author: Arvind Adiga
Publisher: Harper Collins
Market Price: Rs.699

`The Forty Rules of Love`
Author: Elif Shafak
Publisher: Penguin
Market Price: Rs.350

`Now You See Her`
Author: James Patterson
Publisher: Century
Market Price: Rs.550

`Chanakya`s Chant`
Author: Ashwin Sanghi
Publisher: Westland
Market Price: Rs.195

`A Scandalous Secret`
Author: Jaishree Mishra
Publisher: Harper Collins
Market Price: Rs.299

Non-Fiction

`Poor Economics`
Author: Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo
Publisher: Random House
Market Price: Rs.499

`A Free Man`
Author: Aman Sethi
Publisher: Random House
Market Price: Rs.399

`24 Akbar Road`
Author: Rasheed Kidwai
Publisher: Hachette
Market Price: Rs.495

`Does He Know A Mother`s Heart`
Author: Arun Shourie
Publisher: Harper Collins
Market Price: Rs.599

`The Beautiful And The Damned`
Author: Siddhartha Deb
Publisher: Penguin
Market Price: Rs.499

`Where China Meets India`
Author: Thant Myint-U
Publisher: Faber & Faber
Market Price: Rs.699

`Hello Bastar`
Author: Rahul Panda
Publisher: Tranquebar
Market Price: Rs.250

`Ranthambore`
Author: Anjali and Jaisal Singh, Priyanka Gandhi Vadra
Publisher: Sujan Art
Market Price: Rs.4,800

`The End`
Author: Ian Kershaw
Publisher: Allen Lane
Market Price: Rs.899

`Broken Republic`
Author: Arundhati Roy
Publisher: Penguin
Market Price: Rs.499

Friday, 9 September 2011

Poetry was a way of making sense in madness: Fatima Bhutto


(IANS) Blood, sword and suffering are the heartbeat of Fatima Bhutto`s literary soul. And it was fear that propelled her poetry, says the heir to Pakistan`s tragedy-scarred Bhutto family.

An accomplished poet, Fatima, 29, captures love, loss and the solitude of her circumstances in her verses.

"I have not written poetry for a very long time, but poetry like prose is ultimately a means of expressing what seems difficult otherwise," Fatima, who will be in India for the Kovalam Literary Festival Oct 1-2, told reporters in an email interview from Karachi.

"Kovalam will be my first visit to south India. And I`m looking forward to seeing more of the country and interacting with new audiences and opening bridges between our cities and stories."

She won`t be reading out just from her poetry. Fatima has authored ‘Whispers of the Desert’, an anthology of poetry, as well as ‘08.50 am,’ an account of the 2005 Kashmir earthquake, and ‘Songs of Blood and Sword,’ a searing document of the turbulence that had ripped her family apart on her native turf.

Born in 1982 in Kabul to Murtaza Bhutto, the son of former prime minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, Fatima carries the illustrious and violent lineage on her young shoulders.

Her grandfather, Zulfikar Ali Bhutto, was hanged to death in 1979. In 1996, Fatima`s father Murtaza was gunned down in Karachi by the police during the tenure of "aunt" Benazir Bhutto. Eleven years later, Benazir Bhutto met with a similar fate in Rawalpindi in 2007 when she was shot dead at a rally.

Fear propelled her to poetry, Fatima said.

"It (fear) was a strong emotion. I started writing during a very violent time in Karachi`s history. And it was a way of trying to make sense of the madness around," Fatima said.

Poetry helped. She railed at the rage that tore through Pakistan in the 1990s and defined in words the affection she harboured for "papa" Murtaza.

"To my darling papa,
with all the love
 in the world...this is our story...," she penned in an ode to Murtaza Bhutto in the "Whispers of the Desert".

For Fatima, poetry still touches the subcontinent`s young sensitivities despite the proliferation of prose.

"I don`t think youngsters are shying away from poetry. Tishani Doshi is a fascinating poet from the subcontinent and is part of a young generation of writers who seem to be able to do both - poetry and prose," Fatima said.

But there is nothing wrong with a focus if there is one on story-telling, Fatima said.

"Remember that for hundreds of years during colonial rule we were not allowed to tell our own stories here in the subcontinent," the writer said.

Fatima is currently writing a book on Karachi. "I am still in very early pages at the moment," she said.

Tuesday, 6 September 2011

Jane Fonda’s ‘biggest regret in not sleeping with Che Guevara’

Jane Fonda believes that her biggest regret is not sleeping with Che Guevara, a new book has revealed.

The Daily Mail has highlighted excerpts from a new book on Fonda by author Patricia Bosworth, titled ‘Jane Fonda’.


The book chronicles the many loves and lovers of the now 73-year-old actress and her love for radical causes.

She supposedly confided during a feminist consciousness-raising session, “My biggest regret is I never got to f*** Che Guevara.”

The book also claims that she often went braless to distract soldiers but her protests actually created problems and at one stage American Native Indians, who were complaining of discrimination, told her that she could not be their spokesman.

Recently, it was also revealed that Fonda was said to be so afraid of losing her husband Roger Vadim, who had the tendency of keeping many a mistresses for sexual pleasure, that she became a sex addict.
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Monday, 5 September 2011

''Revolution 2020'' not a political novel as such: Chetan Bhagat


Chetan Bhagat's columns on education and corruption inspired him to write 'Revolution 2020', but the author clarifies that the book is not a political novel and that there is no political agenda either.
'It isn't a political novel as such, and there is no political agenda either. However, when you look at politics in the broader sense in terms of making people think in a certain manner, then I am hoping 'Revolution 2020' will do that to a certain extent,' said Bhagat.
'It is inevitable that some of my thoughts about social issues will creep into my stories. However, I am very strict about not indulging in social messages too much.
Set to hit stalls in October, the book is described by the author as 'at its heart, a love story about individuals.'
Excerpts from the interview:
Q: The title suggests of your new book 'Revolution 2020' has an epic quality to the tale. Is this your most epic book to date?
A: It is a somewhat grand title and at some level it represents the grand aspirations of one of the characters. However, it still is, at its heart, a love story about individuals. Yes, compared to my other books, it is somewhat larger in scope.
Q: The novel's theme suggests a triangular love tale against a socio-political backdrop. What has prompted you to try this format?
A: I became involved with national issues, especially when I started to write columns two years ago. Education and corruption became the two causes I wrote about the most in my opinion pieces. As I delved deeper into understanding India, I felt a revolution was inevitable. To explore that idea more, I had started writing 'Revolution 2020' two years ago...Quite amazingly, the book is coming out at a time when we have some early signs of a revolution in front of us.
Q: How much of the socio-political upheavals influences your fiction?
A: It is inevitable that some of my thoughts about social issues will creep into my stories. However, I am very strict about not indulging in social messages too much. A story needs to be entertaining and be able to connect with the readers foremost. If a social thought can fit into that I incorporate it.
Q: How political is 'Revolution 2020'?
A: It isn't a political novel as such, and there is no political agenda either. However, when you look at politics in the broader sense in terms of making people think in a certain manner, then I am hoping 'Revolution 2020' will do that to a certain extent.
Q: How much pressure did you feel to deliver the novel to your expectant readership? Does that pressure take away from the pleasure of writing?
A: There was significant pressure at the start. The book is coming after '2 States', '3 Idiots' and two years of writing columns. I've a lot more readers than the previous book, and it is difficult to make everyone happy at the same time. However, the early reviews of 'Revolution 2020' are extraordinary, and I am now not worried at all. I think the book will deliver to expectations and some more.
Q: The movie rights of all your novels have been sold. Do you enjoy the thought of your words being given a visual spin?
A: Yes, of course. I write in English, which though is growing at a fast pace, does not reach a majority of Indians. Also, many Indians still prefer movies over books. So, if a medium allows my story to reach new people, why not? However, it is not the main reason why I write, and I do not obsess about the film adaptations anymore. I'm fortunate to have a large readership for my books already.
Q: There has been no progress on the movie version of '2 States'. Is that a bother?
A: Not at all. I have realised that the films business is slow and depends on many factors...I sold the rights of 'Five Point Someone' in 2005, and '3 Idiots' only came in 2009. Even 'Hello' took three years. A lot of filmmakers have told me '2 States' has enormous potential, and so I am confident the film will get made.
Q: Finally, what would you tell your young readers about the fight against corruption which Anna Hazare has started?
A: I would like to congratulate the youth who came together, irrespective of identity differences to fight for the right cause and defend the truth. Truth shall prevail are the first words in the constitution. Without a foundation of truth, equality and justice, democracy is meaningless. We must restore the foundation if we want to be a great nation.
Copyright  IANS

Friday, 2 September 2011

Amish Tripathi's Book On Nagas Become This Week's Bestseller

'Poor Economics’ by Abhijit Banerjee and Esther Duflo and ‘The Secret of The Nagas’ by Amish Tripathi have topped the non-fiction and fiction categories of the bestseller list this week.

Fiction

1. ‘The Secret of the Nagas’

Author: Amish Tripathi

Publisher: Westland

2. ‘River Of Smoke

Author: Amitav Ghosh

Publisher: Penguin

3. ‘The Immortals of Meluha’

Author: Amish Tripathi

Publisher: Westland

4. ‘Noon’

Author: Aatish Taseer

Publisher: 4th Estate

5. ‘A Dance with Dragons’

Author: George RR Martin

Publisher: Harper Collins

6. ‘Last Man in Tower’

Author: Arvind Adiga

Publisher: Harper Collins

7. ‘Chanakya`s Chant’

Author: Ashwin Sanghi

Publisher: Westland

8. ‘The Sense of an Ending’

Author: Julian Barnes

Publisher: Random House

9. ‘Now You See Her’

Author: James Patterson

Publisher: Century

10. ‘The Silent Monument

Author: Shobha Nihalani

Publisher: Tara Press

Non fiction

1. ‘Poor Economics’

Author: Abhijit Banerjee & Esther Duflo

Publisher: Random House

2. ‘Does He Know a Mothers Heart?’

Author: Arun Shourie

Publisher: Harper Collins

3. ‘A Free Man’

Author: Aman Sethi

Publisher: Random House

4. ‘24 Akbar Road

Author: Rasheed Kidwai

Publisher: Hachette

5. ‘Where China Meets India

Author: Thant Myint-U

Publisher: Faber & Faber

6. ‘The Beautiful and The Damned’

Author: Siddhartha Deb

Publisher: Penguin

7. ‘Hello Bastar’

Author: Rahul Panda

Publisher: Tranquebar

8. ‘Does the Elephant Dance’

Author: David M. Malone

Publisher: Oxford

9. ‘Pakistan

Author: Maleeha Lodhi

Publisher: Rupa

10. ‘The Service of the State’

Author: Bhaskar Ghose

Publisher: Penguin