Monday, April 30, 2012

A beautiful article in the New Yorker by Jhumpa Lahiri


REFLECTIONS

TRADING STORIES

Notes from an apprenticeship.

by JUNE 13, 2011

The author, at around the age of three, with her parents, Amar and Tapati, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, circa 1970.
The author, at around the age of three, with her parents, Amar and Tapati, in Cambridge, Massachusetts, circa 1970.

PHOTOGRAPH: COURTESY JHUMPA LAHIRI




Books, and the stories they contained, were the only things I felt I was able to possess as a child. Even then, the possession was not literal; my father is a librarian, and perhaps because he believed in collective property, or perhaps because my parents considered buying books for me an extravagance, or perhaps because people generally acquired less then than they do now, I had almost no books to call my own. I remember coveting and eventually being permitted to own a book for the first time. I was five or six. The book was diminutive, about four inches square, and was called “You’ll Never Have to Look for Friends.” It lived among the penny candy and the Wacky Packs at the old-fashioned general store across the street from our first house in Rhode Island. The plot was trite, more an extended greeting card than a story. But I remember the excitement of watching my mother purchase it for me and of bringing it home. Inside the front cover, beneath the declaration “This book is especially for,” was a line on which to write my name. My mother did so, and also wrote the word “mother” to indicate that the book had been given to me by her, though I did not call her Mother but Ma. “Mother” was an alternate guardian. But she had given me a book that, nearly forty years later, still dwells on a bookcase in my childhood room.
Our house was not devoid of things to read, but the offerings felt scant, and were of little interest to me. There were books about China and Russia that my father read for his graduate studies in political science, and issues of Time that he read to relax. My mother owned novels and short stories and stacks of a literary magazine called Desh, but they were in Bengali, even the titles illegible to me. She kept her reading material on metal shelves in the basement, or off limits by her bedside. I remember a yellow volume of lyrics by the poet Kazi Nazrul Islam, which seemed to be a holy text to her, and a thick, fraying English dictionary with a maroon cover that was pulled out for Scrabble games. At one point, we bought the first few volumes of a set of encyclopedias that the supermarket where we shopped was promoting, but we never got them all. There was an arbitrary, haphazard quality to the books in our house, as there was to certain other aspects of our material lives. I craved the opposite: a house where books were a solid presence, piled on every surface and cheerfully lining the walls. At times, my family’s effort to fill our house with books seemed thwarted; this was the case when my father mounted rods and brackets to hold a set of olive-green shelves. Within a few days the shelves collapsed, the Sheetrocked walls of our seventies-era Colonial unable to support them.
What I really sought was a better-marked trail of my parents’ intellectual lives: bound and printed evidence of what they’d read, what had inspired and shaped their minds. A connection, via books, between them and me. But my parents did not read to me or tell me stories; my father did not read any fiction, and the stories my mother may have loved as a young girl in Calcutta were not passed down. My first experience of hearing stories aloud occurred the only time I met my maternal grandfather, when I was two, during my first visit to India. He would lie back on a bed and prop me up on his chest and invent things to tell me. I am told that the two of us stayed up long after everyone else had gone to sleep, and that my grandfather kept extending these stories, because I insisted that they not end.
Bengali was my first language, what I spoke and heard at home. But the books of my childhood were in English, and their subjects were, for the most part, either English or American lives. I was aware of a feeling of trespassing. I was aware that I did not belong to the worlds I was reading about: that my family’s life was different, that different food graced our table, that different holidays were celebrated, that my family cared and fretted about different things. And yet when a book was in my possession, and as I read it, this didn’t matter. I entered into a pure relationship with the story and its characters, encountering fictional worlds as if physically, inhabiting them fully, at once immersed and invisible.
In life, especially as a young girl, I was afraid to participate in social activities. I worried about what others might make of me, how they might judge. But when I read I was free of this worry. I learned what my fictional companions ate and wore, learned how they spoke, learned about the toys scattered in their rooms, how they sat by the fire on a cold day drinking hot chocolate. I learned about the vacations they took, the blueberries they picked, the jams their mothers stirred on the stove. For me, the act of reading was one of discovery in the most basic sense—the discovery of a culture that was foreign to my parents. I began to defy them in this way, and to understand, from books, certain things that they didn’t know. Whatever books came into the house on my account were part of my private domain. And so I felt not only that I was trespassing but also that I was, in some sense, betraying the people who were raising me.
When I began to make friends, writing was the vehicle. So that, in the beginning, writing, like reading, was less a solitary pursuit than an attempt to connect with others. I did not write alone but with another student in my class at school. We would sit together, this friend and I, dreaming up characters and plots, taking turns writing sections of the story, passing the pages back and forth. Our handwriting was the only thing that separated us, the only way to determine which section was whose. I always preferred rainy days to bright ones, so that we could stay indoors at recess, sit in the hallway, and concentrate. But even on nice days I found somewhere to sit, under a tree or on the ledge of the sandbox, with this friend, and sometimes one or two others, to continue the work on our tale. The stories were transparent riffs on what I was reading at the time: families living on prairies, orphaned girls sent off to boarding schools or educated by stern governesses, children with supernatural powers, or the ability to slip through closets into alternate worlds. My reading was my mirror, and my material; I saw no other part of myself.
My love of writing led me to theft at an early age. The diamonds in the museum, what I schemed and broke the rules to obtain, were the blank notebooks in my teacher’s supply cabinet, stacked in neat rows, distributed for us to write out sentences or practice math. The notebooks were slim, stapled together, featureless, either light blue or a brownish-yellow shade. The pages were lined, their dimensions neither too small nor too large. Wanting them for my stories, I worked up the nerve to request one or two from the teacher. Then, on learning that the cabinet was not always locked or monitored, I began helping myself to a furtive supply.
In the fifth grade, I won a small prize for a story called “The Adventures of a Weighing Scale,” in which the eponymous narrator describes an assortment of people and other creatures who visit it. Eventually the weight of the world is too much, the scale breaks, and it is abandoned at the dump. I illustrated the story—all my stories were illustrated back then—and bound it together with bits of orange yarn. The book was displayed briefly in the school library, fitted with an actual card and pocket. No one took it out, but that didn’t matter. The validation of the card and pocket was enough. The prize also came with a gift certificate for a local bookstore. As much as I wanted to own books, I was beset by indecision. For hours, it seemed, I wandered the shelves of the store. In the end, I chose a book I’d never heard of, Carl Sandburg’s “Rootabaga Stories.” I wanted to love those stories, but their old-fashioned wit eluded me. And yet I kept the book as a talisman, perhaps, of that first recognition. Like the labels on the cakes and bottles that Alice discovers underground, the essential gift of my award was that it spoke to me in the imperative; for the first time, a voice in my head said, “Do this.”
As I grew into adolescence and beyond, however, my writing shrank in what seemed to be an inverse proportion to my years. Though the compulsion to invent stories remained, self-doubt began to undermine it, so that I spent the second half of my childhood being gradually stripped of the one comfort I’d known, that formerly instinctive activity turning thorny to the touch. I convinced myself that creative writers were other people, not me, so that what I loved at seven became, by seventeen, the form of self-expression that most intimidated me. I preferred practicing music and performing in plays, learning the notes of a composition or memorizing the lines of a script. I continued working with words, but channelled my energy into essays and articles, wanting to be a journalist. In college, where I studied literature, I decided that I would become an English professor. At twenty-one, the writer in me was like a fly in the room—alive but insignificant, aimless, something that unsettled me whenever I grew aware of it, and which, for the most part, left me alone. I was not at a stage where I needed to worry about rejection from others. My insecurity was systemic, and preëmptive, insuring that, before anyone else had the opportunity, I had already rejected myself.
For much of my life, I wanted to be other people; here was the central dilemma, the reason, I believe, for my creative stasis. I was always falling short of people’s expectations: my immigrant parents’, my Indian relatives’, my American peers’, above all my own. The writer in me wanted to edit myself. If only there was a little more this, a little less that, depending on the circumstances: then the asterisk that accompanied me would be removed. My upbringing, an amalgam of two hemispheres, was heterodox and complicated; I wanted it to be conventional and contained. I wanted to be anonymous and ordinary, to look like other people, to behave as others did. To anticipate an alternate future, having sprung from a different past. This had been the lure of acting—the comfort of erasing my identity and adopting another. How could I want to be a writer, to articulate what was within me, when I did not wish to be myself?
It was not in my nature to be an assertive person. I was used to looking to others for guidance, for influence, sometimes for the most basic cues of life. And yet writing stories is one of the most assertive things a person can do. Fiction is an act of willfulness, a deliberate effort to reconceive, to rearrange, to reconstitute nothing short of reality itself. Even among the most reluctant and doubtful of writers, this willfulness must emerge. Being a writer means taking the leap from listening to saying, “Listen to me.”
This was where I faltered. I preferred to listen rather than speak, to see instead of be seen. I was afraid of listening to myself, and of looking at my life.
It was assumed by my family that I would get a Ph.D. But after I graduated from college, I was, for the first time, no longer a student, and the structure and system I’d known and in some senses depended on fell away. I moved to Boston, a city I knew only vaguely, and lived in a room in the home of people who were not related to me, whose only interest in me was my rent. I found work at a bookstore, opening shipments and running a cash register. I formed a close friendship with a young woman who worked there, whose father is a poet named Bill Corbett. I began to visit the Corbetts’ home, which was filled with books and art—a framed poem by Seamus Heaney, drawings by Philip Guston, a rubbing of Ezra Pound’s gravestone. I saw the desk where Bill wrote, obscured by manuscripts, letters, and proofs, in the middle of the living room. I saw that the work taking place on this desk was obliged to no one, connected to no institution; that this desk was an island, and that Bill worked on his own. I spent a summer living in that house, reading back issues of The Paris Review, and when I was alone, in a bright room on the top floor, pecking out sketches and fragments on a typewriter.
I began to want to be a writer. Secretly at first, exchanging pages with one other person, our prescheduled meetings forcing me to sit down and produce something. Stealing into the office where I had a job as a research assistant, on weekends and at night, to type stories onto a computer, a machine I did not own at the time. I bought a copy of “Writer’s Market,” and sent out stories to little magazines that sent them back to me. The following year, I entered graduate school, not as a writer but as a student of English literature. But beneath my declared scholarly objective there was now a wrinkle. I used to pass a bookshop every day on the way to the train, the storefront displaying dozens of titles that I always stopped to look at. Among them were books by Leslie Epstein, a writer whose work I had not yet read but whose name I knew, as the director of the writing program at Boston University. On a lark one day, I walked into the creative-writing department seeking permission to sit in on a class.
It was audacious of me. The equivalent, nearly two decades later, of stealing notebooks from a teacher’s cabinet; of crossing a line. The class was open only to writing students, so I did not expect Epstein to make an exception. After he did, I worked up the nerve to apply for a formal spot in the creative-writing program the following year. When I told my parents that I’d been accepted, with a fellowship, they neither encouraged nor discouraged me. Like so many aspects of my American life, the idea that one could get a degree in creative writing, that it could be a legitimate course of study, seemed perhaps frivolous to them. Still, a degree was a degree, and so their reaction to my decision was to remain neutral. Though I corrected her, my mother, at first, referred to it as a critical-writing program. My father, I am guessing, hoped it would have something to do with a Ph.D.
My mother wrote poems occasionally. They were in Bengali, and were published now and then in literary magazines in New England or Calcutta. She seemed proud of her efforts, but she did not call herself a poet. Both her father and her youngest brother, on the other hand, were visual artists. It was by their creative callings that they were known to the world, and had been described to me. My mother spoke of them reverently. She told me about the day that my grandfather had had to take his final exam at the Government College of Art, in Calcutta, and happened to have a high fever. He was able to complete only a portion of the portrait he had been asked to render, the subject’s mouth and chin, but it was done so skillfully that he graduated with honors. Watercolors by my grandfather were brought back from India, framed, and shown off to visitors, and to this day I keep one of his medals in my jewelry box, regarding it since childhood as a good-luck charm.
Before our visits to Calcutta, my mother would make special trips to an art store to buy the brushes and paper and pens and tubes of paint that my uncle had requested. Both my grandfather and my uncle earned their living as commercial artists. Their fine art brought in little money. My grandfather died when I was five, but I have vivid memories of my uncle, working at his table in the corner of the cramped rented apartment where my mother was brought up, preparing layouts for clients who came to the house to approve or disapprove of his ideas, my uncle staying up all night to get the job done. I gathered that my grandfather had never been financially secure, and that my uncle’s career was also precarious—that being an artist, though noble and romantic, was not a practical or responsible thing to do.
Abandoned weighing scales, witches, orphans: these, in childhood, had been my subjects. As a child, I had written to connect with my peers. But when I started writing stories again, in my twenties, my parents were the people I was struggling to reach. In 1992, just before starting the writing program at B.U., I went to Calcutta with my family. I remember coming back at the end of summer, getting into bed, and almost immediately writing the first of the stories I submitted that year in workshop. It was set in the building where my mother had grown up, and where I spent much of my time when I was in India. I see now that my impulse to write this story, and several like-minded stories that followed, was to prove something to my parents: that I understood, on my own terms, in my own words, in a limited but precise way, the world they came from. For though they had created me, and reared me, and lived with me day after day, I knew that I was a stranger to them, an American child. In spite of our closeness, I feared that I was alien. This was the predominant anxiety I had felt while growing up.
I was my parents’ firstborn child. When I was seven, my mother became pregnant again, and gave birth to my sister in November, 1974. A few months later, one of her closest friends in Rhode Island, another Bengali woman, also learned that she was expecting. The woman’s husband, like my father, worked at the university. Based on my mother’s recommendation, her friend saw the same doctor and planned to deliver at the same hospital where my sister was born. One rainy evening, my parents received a call from the hospital. The woman’s husband cried into the telephone as he told my parents that their child had been born dead. There was no reason for it. It had simply happened, as it sometimes does. I remember the weeks following, my mother cooking food and taking it over to the couple, the grief in place of the son who was supposed to have filled their home. If writing is a reaction to injustice, or a search for meaning when meaning is taken away, this was that initial experience for me. I remember thinking that it could have happened to my parents and not to their friends, and I remember, because the same thing had not happened to our family, as my sister was by then a year old already, also feeling ashamed. But, mainly, I felt the unfairness of it—the unfairness of the couple’s expectation, unfulfilled.
We moved to a new house, whose construction we had overseen, in a new neighborhood. Soon afterward, the childless couple had a house built in our neighborhood as well. They hired the same contractor, and used the same materials, the same floor plan, so that the houses were practically identical. Other children in the neighborhood, sailing past on bicycles and roller skates, took note of this similarity, finding it funny. I was asked if all Indians lived in matching houses. I resented these children, for not knowing what I knew of the couple’s misfortune, and at the same time I resented the couple a little, for having modelled their home on ours, for suggesting that our lives were the same when they were not. A few years later the house was sold, the couple moving away to another town, and an American family altered the façade so that it was no longer a carbon copy of ours. The comic parallel between two Bengali families in a Rhode Island neighborhood was forgotten by the neighborhood children. But our lives had not been parallel; I was unable to forget this.
When I was thirty years old, digging in the loose soil of a new story, I unearthed that time, that first tragic thing I could remember happening, and wrote a story called “A Temporary Matter.” It is not exactly the story of what had happened to that couple, nor is it a story of something that happened to me. Springing from my childhood, from the part of me that was slowly reverting to what I loved most when I was young, it was the first story that I wrote as an adult.
My father, who, at eighty, still works forty hours a week at the University of Rhode Island, has always sought security and stability in his job. His salary was never huge, but he supported a family that wanted for nothing. As a child, I did not know the exact meaning of “tenure,” but when my father obtained it I sensed what it meant to him. I set out to do as he had done, and to pursue a career that would provide me with a similar stability and security. But at the last minute I stepped away, because I wanted to be a writer instead. Stepping away was what was essential, and what was also fraught. Even after I received the Pulitzer Prize, my father reminded me that writing stories was not something to count on, and that I must always be prepared to earn my living in some other way. I listen to him, and at the same time I have learned not to listen, to wander to the edge of the precipice and to leap. And so, though a writer’s job is to look and listen, in order to become a writer I had to be deaf and blind.
I see now that my father, for all his practicality, gravitated toward a precipice of his own, leaving his country and his family, stripping himself of the reassurance of belonging. In reaction, for much of my life, I wanted to belong to a place, either the one my parents came from or to America, spread out before us. When I became a writer my desk became home; there was no need for another. Every story is a foreign territory, which, in the process of writing, is occupied and then abandoned. I belong to my work, to my characters, and in order to create new ones I leave the old ones behind. My parents’ refusal to let go or to belong fully to either place is at the heart of what I, in a less literal way, try to accomplish in writing. Born of my inability to belong, it is my refusal to let go. 

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Review: The Hobbit or There and back again by J.R.R. Tolkien



The HobbitThe Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

“Far over the Misty Mountains cold…..to dungeons deep and caverns old….
And thus you are transported into a land of goblins, dwarves, elves, wargs, eagles and hobbits!
“The Hobbit” by J.R.R Tolkien was originally a bedtime story for his children and the published version continues the same feel and writing style as a children’s book. It tells the story of a hobbit, which is a creature similar to humans but short like dwarves and with really hairy feet! Needless to say, hobbits became much more familiar to the world, when Peter Jackson made the Lord of the Rings trilogy into blockbuster movies that are sequels to the events in “The Hobbit”
"The Hobbit" has a few familiar characters for those like me who read the more popular “Lord of the Rings” series first. It begins with Gandalf the Grey visiting the quiet hobbit, Bilbo Baggins in his cozy little hobbit hole with the promise of an adventure, that’ll quite change his life forever. And he’s not alone…
Enter twelve dwarves Oin, Gloin (yes, Gimli’s father!), Fili, Kili, Bifur, Bofur, Bombur, Nori, Dori, Dwalin, Balin (the future lord of Moria) and the leader of their company, Thorin Oakenshield. These feisty dwarves are off to the Lonely Mountain, to reclaim their stolen treasure from a dreadful dragon named Smaug. So where does Gandalf think a small peaceful hobbit like Bilbo would fit in? Well, Gandalf thinks Bilbo being small and sneaky will eventually reveal his true purpose in the quest, which he does much to the dwarves’ amazement.
You’ll also be introduced to Gollum and the innocuous looking “one ring”, the story behind Bilbo’s sword’s name, and how he comes to possess his remarkable coat of mithril. It is interesting how these events that were narrated so casually in this book, went on to become the epic that is the Lord of the Rings.
The book is narrated in a playful way with plenty of typical Tolkienish songs, and is a book that will appeal to the pre-teen/teen reader who is not yet corrupted by the plethora of poorly written YA books available these days, and those of us adults who are ardent fans of Tolkien’s fabulous Middle earth.
If you are feeling ambitious enough, try a “The Silmarillion”, “The Hobbit” and “The Lord of the Rings” reading marathon! This long flight home is almost tempting me to attempt it!

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Thursday, April 12, 2012

CAN'T WAIT!

Hope it's atleast as good as the Harry Potter series!
http://www.littlebrown.co.uk/TheCasualVacancy


THE CASUAL VACANCY

by J.K. Rowling

© Wall to Wall Media Ltd.  Photographer: Andrew Montgomery., image copyright

Sunday, April 8, 2012

Review: Jaya, An Illustrated Retelling of the Mahabharata by Devdutt Pattanaik


Jaya: An Illustrated Retelling Of The MahabharataJaya: An Illustrated Retelling Of The Mahabharata by Devdutt Pattanaik
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Where do I even begin to review this book? I am just glad I bought it when I did.
I was on my way back to Boston from Hyderabad, India and had a lot of time to kill at the airport after the security check. As I was wandering in the airport bookstore, I came across this book, read the back cover and was hooked. It goes thus,

"A son renounces sex so that his old father can remarry
A daughter is a prize in an archery contest
A teacher demands half a kingdom as his tuition fee
A student is turned away because of his caste
A mother asks her sons to share a wife
A father curses his son-in-law to be old and impotent
A husband lets another man make his wife pregnant
A wife blindfolds herself to share her husband's blindness
A forest is destroyed for a new city
A family is divided over inheritance
A king gambles away his kingdom
A queen is forced to serve as a maid
A man is stripped of his manhood for a year
A woman is publicly disrobed
A war is fought where all rules are broken
A shift in sexuality secures victory
The vanquished go to paradise
The victors lose their children
The earth is bathed in blood
God is cursed

Until wisdom prevails"

I grew up listening to stories from the Ramayana and the Mahabharata, but I was always partial towards the Mahabharata. I don't know whether it was because of Krishna's adorable childhood antics, the myriad of heroic characters each with their own prowess, or because the unfortunate tale of the Pandava brothers struck a cord in my heart. Honestly, the Mahabharata is an epic in the true sense of the word. The scope is so vast and there are so many characters that typically most interpretations just skim the events and dwell on the famous warring cousins, the Pandavas and the Kauravas.
Anyway, coming back to Devdutt Pattanaik's retelling, I think he makes it more interesting by presenting much more than the bare bones of the story. He delves into the sub-plots, significance of little known events, different folk-lores and the numerous stories within stories which make up the real Mahabharata conceptualized by Ved Vyasa. I absolutely loved it, if I haven't said so before already!
Devdutt Pattanaik is a mythologist by passion, according to his Goodreads bio and I think he does this job exceptionally well. Any lover of Hindu mythology will not be disappointed by this book.


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Review: A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin


A Game of Thrones (A Song of Ice and Fire #1)A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

This book is the first in a series called the "Song of Ice and Fire" by George R.R. Martin. Apart from the obvious rhyming name with J.R.R Tokien, the other thing that really drew me to this book was the immense hype over the book and the HBO TV series based on it.
A Game of Thrones begins with a prologue in which three men who have deserted the "Wall", cross paths with the "Other" and subsequently meet their death. Two of them are killed by the Other and the third person is beheaded by the central character Ned Stark at the beginning of the first chapter for deserting his post at the Wall.
And so we are introduced to the Starks, one of the important families in the series. Eddard (Ned) Stark is the Lord of Winterfell, who lives with his wife, Catelyn, and six children, one of which is his bastard son, Jon Snow.
I thought the book started off really well, with the Stark children finding six orphan 'direwolf' pups in the wild, and now each kid can have a pet direwolf that embodies his/her personality. Coincidentally, the direwolf is a sigil of the Stark dynasty. However, everything cannot remain cute and cozy forever and thus enter King Robert Baratheon and the Lannisters.

Ned's deep friendship with the King earns him a role as the new "Hand of the King", the previous Hand, Lord Jon Arryn (also the husband of Catelyn's sister Lysa) having died in mysterious circumstances. To keep his promise to his wife Catelyn, that he would investigate the death of Jon Arryn, Ned must travel south to the King's capital, only to get entangled in a deadly 'Game of Thrones'.

There are atleast three, at times four, parallel storylines in the first book, which are not brought together even at the end of this book and which is clearly the reason for so many subsequent books in the series.

Martin's style of writing each chapter from the third person point of view of a particular character was interesting and something I liked a lot. However, he does not do a lot of justice to most characters, except for Jon Snow, Tyrion Lannister and Arya Stark, all three of whom came the closest to being three dimensional characters. Ned Stark for one is portrayed as being too noble to the point of seeming dumb. Come-on fella, can you really not be more discreet when dealing with heartless, incestuous monsters of a character, who for all you know could be cold-blooded murderers? Why do you have to be as blatant as a Bond villain (haha that dialogue by Schmidt in New Girl cracks me up everytime!)?
Martin has a tendency to repeat a lot of sentences over and over again, which perhaps is the reason why this book is close to 800 pages. For example,"Winter is coming". Be prepared to hear this atleast a gazillion times. Aaaaaand, if Jon Snow was called a bastard one more time, I swear I'd have torn my hair out. Really, Martin, we got it after the first time you mentioned he wasn't Catelyn's son. You really didn't have to beat us over the head with it in every sentence his name was in.

Anywhoo...the bare skeleton of the story is this
1) The central family of Starks from Winterfell in the North are noblemen, whose patriarch, Ned is really close to the King.
2) The King is purportedly an usurper of the Throne (even though he is honorable, a broken-hearted lover and all that) and is married to a b!#*@ of a woman, Cersei, who belongs to the evil Lannister family.
3) The daughter of the ex-King, Daenerys is out to seek revenge and grows from a meek girl of thirteen at the beginning of the book, to a strong woman of...wait for it....FOURTEEN, by the end!
And somewhere along the border of the Seven Kingdoms is a Wall to keep the Others out.
At this level, the plot is extremely interesting. It is, however, unfortunately marred by Martin's writing. His description of sex is disturbing to the point of unnatural. Like a girl falling in love with her savage rapist of a husband, who can barely communicate with her or has any feelings for her in return. I do not shy away from books that describe violence or rape, and I guess Dany's case was very common in a medieval world as described by Martin, but beasts suckling on a human just crossed the line of 'ickyness' for me! This is perhaps one of the several instances where Martin lost complete control over his pen. And don't even get me started on the Dothrakis!

The characters are all either black or white, again except for Tyrion Lannister, who is so far my most favorite character. It just seems as if Martin tried really hard to give shades of gray to all the other characters.

My slight interest in the series remains due to the unfortunate turn of events at the end of the first book (and I commend Martin for giving such a sad fate to one of his central characters), the better defined characters of Tyrion, Arya and Jon (Jon, maybe not as much as the other two) and my curiosity to see if Martin explains the significance of direwolves.

People compare these books to the Lord of the Rings, but I'd rather not venture into a comparison. I have not read a lot of fantasy series, apart from Tolkien's and hence I might come off as very biased. I can see why the 'Game of Thrones' makes a grand TV series, but the story is not one of brave men and heroic deeds, it is one of crafty men and women indulging in medieval politics and a whole lot of sex, violence and drama. I really don't have a problem with the latter type, except for when it comes off as immature and extremely unnecessary at times. I believe this concept would have surpassed excellence in the hands of a more mature writer, but oh..that is again an "if only" question, and seldom are those ever answered.

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Saturday, April 7, 2012

An interesting blog about the common ways books get noticed

http://www.goodreads.com/blog/show/343-how-do-books-get-discovered-a-guide-for-publishers-and-authors-who-want

PS: All this just means....When I do write a book, I am really counting on you to get it noticed, my friends!! :)

Simon Mayo launches a hunt for a new children’s author

Now with JK Rowling moving on to writing novels with an adult (I'd much rather say "grown-ups") theme, a hunt is on to see if someone can fill the void.
For the full post visit  http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/public/competitions/article3374607.ece
Will that be you?


Review: The Code Book by Simon Singh

The Code Book: The Science of Secrecy from Ancient Egypt to Quantum CryptographyThe Code Book: The Science of Secrecy from Ancient Egypt to Quantum Cryptography by Simon Singh
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I never thought I'd love a book about mathematics, or ever see the beauty of mathematics. My mother was definitely right when she kept pestering me to work harder on my math and argued that it was EVERYWHERE! (I had argued back saying I would be fine as long as I could perform the basic calculations!)
Maybe this is what growing up is about!
That being said, this is a very informative book about the past, present and future of cryptography. Singh takes us on a journey from ancient times where simple communications and hence simple codes sufficed, through a series of unfortunate events that resulted in the execution of Mary, Queen of Scots,to a time in the future when quantum cryptography might prevail. My favorite part is when he talks about the decipherment of Linear B (which led me to another amazing book of the same name), an ancient language discovered in the remains of a palace in Crete. Oh, and he also makes the Second World War seem interesting in an entirely differently way, by which I mean he doesn't drone on and on about the vile Nazis.
Singh has a knack for explaining ideas and theories, which might seem mundane if explained by someone else, in a very interesting manner. His use of characters called Alice,Bob and Eve to explain the codes, made it easy for a layperson like me to understand the theory behind them.
He even adds a few ciphers for us to decipher at the end. I must admit I skipped over those pages, but might return to them at some point in the future.
I recommend this book to anyone who is fascinated by ancient history, linguistics, cryptography, quantum physics, OR MATHEMATICS!

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Who else is as excited as I am?!!!



“Far over the misty mountains cold
To dungeons deep and caverns old
We must away ere break of day
To seek the pale enchanted gold.

The dwarves of yore made mighty spells,
While hammers fell like ringing bells
In places deep, where dark things sleep,
In hollow halls beneath the fells.

For ancient king and elvish lord
There many a gleaming golden hoard
They shaped and wrought, and light they caught
To hide in gems on hilt of sword.

On silver necklaces they strung
The flowering stars, on crowns they hung
The dragon-fire, in twisted wire
They meshed the light of moon and sun.

Far over the misty mountains cold
To dungeons deep and caverns old
We must away, ere break of day,
To claim our long-forgotten gold.

Goblets they carved there for themselves
And harps of gold; where no man delves
There lay they long, and many a song
Was sung unheard by men or elves.

The pines were roaring on the height,
The wind was moaning in the night.
The fire was red, it flaming spread;
The trees like torches blazed with light.

The bells were ringing in the dale
And men looked up with faces pale;
The dragon's ire more fierce than fire
Laid low their towers and houses frail.

The mountain smoked beneath the moon;
The dwarves, they heard the tramp of doom.
They fled their hall to dying fall
Beneath his feet, beneath the moon.

Far over the misty mountains grim
To dungeons deep and caverns dim
We must away, ere break of day,
To win our harps and gold from him!”
J.R.R. Tolkien, The Hobbit

So I added this poll in Goodreads because I thought it would be pretty interesting to know....

Review: How I Killed Pluto and Why it Had it Coming: Mike Brown

How I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It ComingHow I Killed Pluto and Why It Had It Coming by Mike Brown
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I had not really given much thought to this astronomer called Mike Brown, despite reading about the demotion of Pluto as a planet a few years ago. So the title of this book was intriguing and I was curious to know who this person was, who wanted to take the blame for messing with a perfectly happy 9-planet solar-system.
My first impression of the book was that the author was clearly not a writer. I don't really care as long as the story told is interesting enough and in this case, the book did seem to be written from the heart. I appreciate Brown's attempt to intertwine the events that led to Pluto's downgrading, with anecdotes from his personal life, but frankly after a while, they completely took away the focus from Pluto's story. This made it more of a memoir than a book of the science/non-fiction genre. The events in the story are also haphazard and I had to retrace my steps, every few pages to try and remember what was going on before the author's deviation into his family life.
The book begins on the day IAU met to decide Pluto's fate and then goes back in time to when the author made a bet with a fellow astronomer that he would find a planet in five years. In the five years that ensued, a bunch of objects(I'll refer to them as objects henceforth because I am left confused by the definition of planet as everyone is) were found with a multitude of telescopes. But none of them are deemed to be a "planet" by the author. So far so good. In all fairness, it really wasn't the author who found these objects. As with any university professor, it was the hard-working graduate students who slogged night after night to find those bright specks in the sky. At one point, Brown even admits to this, and this was something I really appreciated.
I also empathized deeply with his team of astronomers, when someone else tried to steal his discovery as their own. But then, in other cases, Brown acts extremely naive and reveals his discoveries to his peers, even before he has understood for sure what they are. Did it not cross his mind, that any astronomer with a telescope could point to the location, find it for himself and take the credit? Maybe it only served him right when the Spanish guy stole one of the discoveries.
I also have a bone to pick with him for blurring the lines between astronomy and astrology in a lot of cases. It seemed a little weird to hear an astronomer talk about planets ruling his fate (I mean, seriously?!!).
In the end, I think the title of the book is extremely misleading because Brown was not entirely responsible for 'killing Pluto'. The decision was taken by a bunch of astronomers from IAU, of which Brown isn't even a member, because in his own words he's too lazy to fill out the application.
Science is constantly evolving with new discoveries being made everyday, and it is clear that Pluto is not really a 'planet' based on the fact that there are several Pluto-like objects revolving around the Sun. The decision, as everyone knows, was to give it an ambiguous name, a "dwarf planet". Well, planet or not, Pluto will obviously remain a part of the current version of solar system. (I don't understand why textbooks will have to remove it from the solar system. After all they show us the asteroids!).
But for now, this is probably the best we can do with this meager understanding of the macrocosm, that is the Universe.


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Review: The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks: Rebecca Skloot

The Immortal Life of Henrietta LacksThe Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks by Rebecca Skloot
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book deserves all the credit it's getting. I am thoroughly impressed by Rebecca Skloot's perseverance and thoroughness in writing this book. It is definitely a brilliant effort and a must read for anyone who has ever worked with HeLa cells.
The book revolves around an old debate about ethical ownership of discarded body cells, tissues, and organs, most notably brought to limelight by the story of a poor black woman named Henrietta Lacks, who died of cervical cancer many years ago. Ms. Skloot must be admired for following up with her surviving family members who are still sour about the fact that while it was their mother's/wife's cancerous cells that have contributed immensely to the world of medicine, they still can't afford health insurance. I came to like Deborah most of all of Henrietta's living children, because of her die-hard attitude towards discovering the truth about her mother and older sister, and not just letting her bitterness for Hopkins or greed for compensation for her mother's cells, drown her completely.
Ms. Skloot describes each and every character in such detail that you end up with a feeling that you have actually met and known such a person. One episode from her book that struck me quite a bit was when during the post-mortem of Henrietta's body, the assistant Mary looks at her painted, red toenail and realizes that she is dissecting an actual person, who must have lovingly painted those nails. It made me reaffirm my decision of not pursuing medicine as a career, because I wouldn't have been strong enough.
On the topic of medical ethics and informed consent,Ms Skloot presents all the facts in a fairly neutral manner and presents both sides of the debate, allowing the reader to leave with an unbiased perspective. Personally, it left me thinking of that cheek swab I gave the nurse a few years ago for the Leukemia registry.


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Friday, April 6, 2012

Review: Galileo's Daughter: A Historical Memoir of Science, Faith and Love by Dava Sobel


Galileo's Daughter: A Historical Memoir of Science, Faith and Love Galileo's Daughter: A Historical Memoir of Science, Faith and Love by Dava Sobel
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

"Galileo's daughter" is the biography of the great philosopher and astronomer, with some loving letters by his daughter interspersed throughout the narrative. I have been reading a lot of biographies lately (something I had sworn, I would never have an interest in), and this one is unique because it primarily focuses on the relationship between Galileo and his daughter and is essentially a biography of both of them.
Sobel presents a very vivid description of Galileo's life, his trials and tribulations, the consolations his daughter provided through his tough times and very often,a claustrophobic view of Maria Celeste's life as a cloistered nun. The letters by themselves aren't extremely interesting (except for Suor Maria Celeste's acknowledgement of Galileo as "Most illustrious Father" or "Most beloved and illustrious Father"! I mean how many of us refer to our dear dad this way anymore!). They present the day to day banality of the convent life, her hardships, her constant demands for material and monetary support from her father, her resignation at not being as intelligent as her father and lauding his merits, while constantly asking for advice (That is extremely modest of her, considering it was she who finished his final manuscripts for him). While the letters brought a relatively unknown person to life, and showed Galileo as a loving father, they did break up the narrative often enough to annoy me after a certain point.
Galileo placed his two young daughters at the San Mateo convent, where they devoted themselves to the lives of cloistered nuns and lived their lives in abject poverty, despite the loving financial and emotional support of their father. The older daughter took upon the name 'Maria Celeste' as an ode to her father's devotion to celestial objects and it is through her letters that we get a glimpse of a daughter's relationship with her famous father, and their loving support to each other.
Unfortunately for us,Galileo's replies to his daughter were never found. Therefore,what could have been a incredible dialogue between the two, is reduced to a disparate monologue of letters, in which a daughter keeps asking her father for financial help and in return provides him with love and unconditional support in the light of his run-ins with the Church. It made me think of( and be thankful for) the ease with which the world communicates now, and it was rather unnerving to think of the number of days (or even weeks) Galileo and Suor Maria Celeste must have waited to get their letters. It also made me lament the lost art of writing such long heartfelt letters what with modern communication lingo that includes abbreviations such as "XOXO", "<3", "Waddup" in the interest of time. People keep in touch often and therefore have the liberty to shorten their communication! (Frequency is inversely proportional to wavelength, anyone?)
Anyway,I thought "Galileo's daughter" was an interesting, well researched book that portrayed Galileo as a man of science who defied the Church, while being deeply religious at the same time and who tried to reconcile the two all his life. At the end of it, you might notice that people have been struggling for the same things through the centuries. Unrighteous censorship, religious freedom and the right to free speech to name a few.

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Review: The Thirteenth Tale: Diane Setterfield

The Thirteenth TaleThe Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

The book is based upon the almost tangible bond that binds twins, how different even identical twins can be and how the absense of one twin affects the other.The story begins when Margaret Lea who is the daughter of a book-shop owner has returned back home one night to find a strange letter addressed to her. This letter from one of the greatest novelists of that time, Vida Winter leaves her confused and surprised. By the way, Ms Vida Winter writes "fairy-tales" all of which do not end the same way they do in classic childrens' fairy tales. They all have a suspenseful and morbid ending.
So coming back to letter, the reason Ms Lea is surprised, is because she has never shown any interest in the writer at all, and neither has she read any of her books. Why did this mysterious Vida Winter decide to write to her? Well, it turns out Ms Winter is dying and needs a competent biographer to portray the extremely strange story she wants to tell the world. The only problem? You can never tell when Vida Winter is lying! Having lied about her origin, her family and her life to journalists all the time, there are supposed to be hundreds of articles about Ms Winter all of which contradict each other. As the letter offers no explanation of why she was chosen, Margaret trudges into her father's book-store, finds her most famous book "Thirteen Tales of Change and Desperation" and is intrigued when at the end of the book she only finds twelve! The way "curiosity killed the cat", it drives Margaret to Vida Winter's desolate mansion where she takes up the job of being her biographer. What follows is a strange tale of Ms Winter's childhood, curious discoveries and a twist to the tale that you cannot imagine.
Diane Setterfield writes extremely well and keeps the reader spell-bound even when she is rambling about ghosts in the window turning out to be hallucinations of the troubled protagonist. She pulls off the "victorian" feel to the book, although by mentioning "Jane Eyre" a gazillion times (which seems to be the inspiration for this book) she annoyed the hell out of me . However, I enjoyed the "story within a story" concept and the transition from the present to the past and vice-versa did not feel jarring. I loved the spooky descriptions and actually enjoyed the goose-bumps, despite being a terrible, terrible coward who is usually scared by even a silly "Boo"!
I did not like the character of Margaret Lea one bit. She seemed too dull and too depressed to be able to pull off the task of an autobiographer. I had the same problem with the character of Vida Winter. Just another old, dying lady with a will of steel and holding a girl hostage with the ruse of a biographer's job. She could have been much, much more! The supporting characters in Ms. Winter's story however stood out exceptionally well. The Missus, who cares for the twins, was well defined, as was her relationship with John-the Dig. The twins were beautifully described as being so very different, yet so connected to each other that they couldn't bear staying apart and fell ill on being separated. Setterfield fashions a very lucid village filled with people who were each connected to the story in a major way and not just randomly. The best part was that at the end, every dot was connected, and at no point are you left searching for answers.


Recommended for: Fans of Gothic fiction, Victorian settings and spooky mysteries.

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