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.
Posted by Picasa

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







Thursday, 1 September 2011

Madonna’s ‘Sex’ most wanted out-of-print book in US


Madonna’s 1992 book ‘Sex’ has reportedly become the most wanted out-of-print book in the US of the past one year.

According to BookFinder.com, the singer’s limited-edition picture book got into controversy after its first release for its explicit images and went on to be a collector’s item, reports the BBC.

The book search engine tracked the 100 most sought-after out-of-print titles in its annual report.

The top 10 books that featured in the report are:

1. Sex - Madonna

2. Promise Me Tomorrow - Nora Roberts

3. Rage - Stephen King (as Richard Bachman)

4. My Pretty Pony - Stephen King

5. In a Dark Place: The Story of a True Haunting - Ray Garton

6. Codex Seraphinianus - Luigi Serafini

7. Man in Black - Johnny Cash

8. Marilyn: A Biography - Norman Mailer

9. Arithmetic Progress Papers - H Henry Thomas

10. Mandingo - Kyle Onstott