Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Life without a Girlfriend (or, a Smartphone)!

Life without a Smartphone! (Image Source - Google)
Living without a smartphone is like living without a girlfriend after a breakup:

1. For the first few days you think that all is lost and life will not be the same anymore. All that you see are only happy people gleefully using their phones.

2. After a few days, you start getting used to a life without a smartphone. You miss your smartphone often, but you are slowly learning to live without one.

3. After a while, you learn to live life freely, without relying on a smart phone. Of course, you depend on so many other gadgets to do the work that a single smartphone did - alarm, calculator, post-its, sketchpads, etc., - but at least you no more feel tied up with a single choice.

4. And, once you have crossed that point of no return, you feel amused about about how crazily you were once addicted to the phone and thought that you couldn't live with one!

P.S., Of course, and then you get a new one!!!😛

Thursday, December 19, 2019

Book Review - Outgrowing God - A Beginner's Guide, Richard Dawkins

I believe I was a little too eager to grab this new work by Richard Dawkins to have read the reviews first. This 'new' book doesn't exactly feel new if you have read Mr. Dawkins' other books already. This seems to be sort of a summary of all his previous books.

As usual,  Mr. Dawkins generously bashes the religions - Christianity and Islam in particular - denouncing the evils and superstitions found in them. Then he argues as to why scientific thinking, and not religions, should be guiding our mind and life. Then he goes on to wrap it all up by highlighting how science has helped us so far, both in improving our lives and our knowledge of the world around us. Feeling a sense of deja vu!

The God Delusion + The Greatest Show on Earth + The Magic of Reality = Outgrowing God. Can't give this book anything more than 3/5!

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Book Review – Live and Let Others Live: Life Lessons from Mahavira

Image Source - Google
There are so many books that we enjoy reading. Then, there are many books that leave within us a deep impact and stay within us for a long time. There are very few books that, once you finish reading, stir up an urge to buy a lot of copies and distribute to every one you know. If only I have the wherewithal, I would definitely buy as many copies of this book as possible and distribute to every other person I know and meet. Such a gem!

Bhagwan Mahavira does not need any introduction. Known widely as someone who revived the Jain religion, he was supposedly the contemporary of another noble soul, Gautama Buddha. Born 2500 years ago, his thoughts and ideals have stood the test of Time, shining all along. From inspiring the kings of early days to inspiring one of the greatest personas of the modern time, Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, the teachings of Bhagwan Mahavira have shone light on the path of righteousness and proper living to saints and simple householders alike.

His teachings of non-violence, tolerance for contrary viewpoints, equanimity in behaviour and equal treatment of all beings, along with his views on caring for the environment around us all set him apart from other religious founders / leaders. Reading this work, millennia after Mahavira first thought these thoughts, I find them as relevant today as they were then and they will be after even many more millennia.

For a long time I had been searching for a good work to begin learning about Jainism and Mahavira. In this book I have found the ideal beginning. Beautifully chosen thoughts and cohesively compiled chapters make this an authentic read. This is a book that you should read, read again and again and again. Worthy words of wisdom!

Sunday, December 8, 2019

Book Review – Astrophysics for People in a Hurry, Neil DeGrasse Tyson

Image Source - Google
In the unimaginably vast, inhospitable territory of the universe, even the pebble-sized asteroids are said to hurtle faster than the fastest vehicles that we human have here on earth. It is needless then to elaborate on the impact they can create upon collision with any object on their way. This little book by Neil DeGrasse Tyson is one such impactful work that will leave a deep impact on our minds, shattering away our ignorance and ego.

I have always been fascinated by whom I consider the trinity of scientific, rational writing – Christopher Hitchens, Neil DeGrasse Tyson and Richard Dawkins. And, this is the first proper work of Mr. Tyson I had laid my hands upon. I must admit that I was thrilled throughout. Easy to understand, interesting to read and intriguing enough to leave you wanting for more, this is a brilliant read.

The author commences the book right at the time our Universe was born and narrates the timeline of its evolution, its constituents, the current state and its probable future. Scattered along the pages are lessons on quantum physics to cosmic black-holes. The author ends the book in a deeply contemplative mode, pondering over our place in the universe, our pitiably petty quarrels and possible changes in attitude that could stem from inculcating a cosmic perspective in our minds and lives.

Must read for every astronomy aficionado!

Wednesday, November 27, 2019

Book Review - Nine Lives, William Dalrymple


We humans love stories and are fascinated by story-tellers who can weave some fascinating tales. Right from our childhood, when even the noblest of morals was taught using fables, to filling ourselves with news telecast on a daily basis to learn the happenings around, we learn more in the form of stories than through mere stating of facts. Authors like William Dalrymple are fascinating raconteurs that bring history before our eyes with their lucid prose. This book is a testimony to that.


This ancient land of India has seen the rise and fall of various civilizations and cultures. Along the way, it has also seen the birth and decline of various religious paths. Though many of them, like Buddhism, Jainism and Tantric worship, have not caught up with the larger masses, they have held on to their own and flourished in the shadow of that all-encompassing ocean called Hinduism. With their own holy scriptures, rituals and routes to seek the Eternal Truth, they are still in vogue among many parts of this country. In this book, Mr. Dalrymple brings to fore nine such people, who have all, in their varied ways, been searching for that one single Divinity.

A Jain nun explains her struggle to let go of her attachment towards her friend who undertook ritualistic fasting unto death. One of the members from the ‘lowest’ levels of the society gets worshipped by even the higher castes for a quarter of an year, when he dons the garb of a God and becomes ‘occupied’ by the Divine. Then told the tale of ‘Devadasis’, so-called ‘Slaves of the Lord’, a pure tradition that got tarnished and truncated into mere flesh trade. The waning art of Rajasthani Bhopas who use their ‘Ektara’ (a musical instrument) and a ‘Phad’ (a fabric painting) to invoke the Lord and sing His glories, wandering across the land. There are Sufi dervishes caught in the whirlwind between their pure love for the God and the puritanical, rabid form of Islam that threatens the very existence of humanity. Then there is a Tibetan monk who tried unsuccessfully to fight the invasion of his country by the Chinese, but who now spends his time in the hope of atoning for his acts of violence and returning to his motherland someday. Thanjavur’s bronze idol makers who have kept alive the traditions of their ancestors for nearly a millennia, casting bronze images that turn into vessels of Divinity, have been lent voice in the next chapter. The final two chapters are devoted to talking with people that chose to seek the Divine in the profane and the mundane – through Tantra.

Every character in this book is different and unique. Yet, what binds them all together is their seeking to connect with their God through art forms and austerities. Also, the understanding they share about there being one God who gets worshipped in many names is a common trait that needed to be told to the whole world.

Each of these nine chapters brims with history, tradition and emotions. Traveling across the vast expanse of India, Mr. Dalrymple has put in a lot of efforts to capture the characters in their truest, most vulnerable selves, laying bare their lives, emotions, ideals and ambitions. As each chapter comes to an end you can’t help feeling a tinge of emotion – sorrow, anger, awe, anguish and, above all, hope – surging through your hearts. Riveting. Realistic. Wonderful recounting.

These ‘Nine Lives’ will really live upon your heart!

Monday, November 11, 2019

Mrityor Ma Amrutam Gamaya! ❤

Mrityor ma Amrutam gamaya!




Early in my life I had realised that we humans need not protect Nature but only respect it. I sometimes laugh at efforts to 'protect and conserve' Nature. Nature isn't our pet animal, but this whole vast Universe. She can get hurt and heal herself on her own. It is us, the fragile humans that need to protect ourselves from her whims.

My thought was reasserted today when I saw this -

In the pit dug for rain-water harvesting, there were some roots of the old curry leaves tree. The workers had cut those roots and continued with their work. Now, a month or so after, I am seeing a lot of fresh growth in that root, that had remained buried for more than a decade!

Nature, thy name is Life!

Sunday, October 27, 2019

Happy Diwali 2019!

*'Diwali is no longer exciting for us adults. It is only for children!’*

Happy Diwali 2019! (Image Source - Google)
Whenever I hear this clichéd utterance from someone, I smile. Diwali is not exciting?! You either gotta’ be kidding me or you are, respected sir/madam, a blatant liar. Like the forbidden tinge of excitement one feels when one hears the name of a long-last crush, all of us feel at least a hint of excitement every time we even hear the name of this festival. From fireworks to delicious snacks, new clothes to visits from friends and relatives, people of every age group have something to look forward to in Diwali. This is a festival that means fun for all the age groups.

Not just that, even for people across economic and social barriers, this is a festival that means grandeur. Even the economically least privileged person in the society ensures to provide well for one’s family and oneself on this auspicious day. Thus, this is a festival that everyone looks forward to. 

For the whole of this week, I have been wishing everyone I come across to have a great festival – cab drivers, security guards at malls and departmental stores, parking lot attendants, sales people at showrooms, neighbors, colleagues and even strangers. Whenever I utter ‘Happy Diwali’, I could see a glint in their eyes and a genuine smile across their face! Yes. They ALL love this festival and they all want to celebrate it big. 

What makes every festival an occasion to rejoice and remember is the simple act of sharing - sharing the special food, sharing the moments, sharing the good vibes and, above all, sharing the blessings. Festivals are occasions for spreading the love within us around and filling us with the light around. 

On this Diwali, the most vibrant festival of Lights, wishing you and your family members abundance of good health, absolute peace, unbound happiness, ever-lasting love and every good thing that you can ever wish for! 

Happy Diwali 2019!

Friday, October 4, 2019

Brief Review - Fifty Things that Made the Modern Economy, Tim Harford

Image Source - Google
So many books have been written about all the great inventions that make our lives as comfortable as they are today. In fact, we take for granted most of them - inventions that help us travel to any part of the globe within hours, to communicate with people in any part of the world at the touch of a button, to process/store food without having to run behind it everyday, ability to change the landscape around us at will, to state a few. This book speaks about many such inventions too, but with a difference.

Without making a tale out of each of the inventions and delving into what led their inventors to their 'eureka' moment, this book defines the inventions and the social-economic impact that these had on the world around them. Crisp, clear and a pleasure to read.

Book Review - Mystical Tales for a Magical Life, Shubha Vilas

Image Source - Google
If only I could give a negative rating to this book!

Nope. Not for the contents, but for the misleading title and the writing quality. This was the same author who had given a lovable book on Shri Hanuman and hence I bought this book with a lot of expectations.

But the tales are all neither unheard nor vedic. These are but little tales found all along the Mahabharatha. Except for one or two, the rest are all tales that we Indians know like the back of our hands. Neither are they Vedic in terms of sources.

Glaring spelling mistakes all along are a pain too. The author's attempt at sharing the wisdom, which are little better than platitudes make reading a pain. So are the 'lessons' at the end of every story, which almost recount the story in brief and try to state the obvious out of it. The cursive font makes for the eyesoreness and nothing else.

Overall, if you have already read the basic versions of the Mahabharatha or a fan of Indian epics, you can safely skip this book. There is nothing new or even refreshing here.

Monday, August 12, 2019

Book Review – Amritsar – Mrs Gandhi’s Last Battle, Mark Tully & Satish Jacob

Amritsar - Mrs Gandhi's Last Battle, Mark Tully & Satish Jacob (Image Source - Google)
1984 is one of those years in Indian history that reek of blood. The rampant killings by the secessionist terrorists, the Indian army’s entry into the holiest of places for the Sikhs – the Golden Temple itself - to capture those terrorists, subsequent assassination of Indira Gandhi to avenge that ‘insult’, and the resultant pogroms that mercilessly butchered innocent Sikhs in and around Delhi – if all these didn’t shock the Indians enough, the year wrapped up with the Bhopal gas tragedy, which wiped out more than 2000 people overnight.

I am always fascinated by history, especially Indian history. But the problem with history is that you must view it through various perspectives in order to arrive at the real, clear picture. Identifying the correct, well-informed and unbiased sources of history is a big challenge, especially in an age where fake news and misinformation campaigns have really become a threat to the very fabric of human societies. This book by Mark Tully stands out for the very reason that it tries to bring out the facts of that time without being biased to any side. It places the blame on the culprits, gives credit where it is due and states the facts without giving us any hints to judge on a particular way.

Politicians across the globe have this bad habit of creating demons to do their sayings, but such demons have inevitably ended up haunting their own masters. The world recently, and painfully, learnt this lesson for the Nth time when Osama bin Laden, CIA’s poster boy in a cause against the Russians, perpetrated the worst terror attack on the American soil. Two decades before that, India also had such a radical, fundamentalist preacher whom the Congress politicians groomed for their narrow-minded political gains. Sant Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale was a preacher with radical notions but living in oblivion. Sanjay and his coterie brought him to the limelight in order to weaken their opposition in Punjab, the Akali Dal. But soon the sant, meaning ‘saint’, accumulated a lot of followers, grew more radical and became quite a brutal force to reckon with.

With support pouring in for him in all forms, Bhindranwale started running a parallel government, terrorizing not just the common people of Punjab but the very unity of this country. The spinelessness of the government led things to the breaking point, allowing the Sant to not just occupy the holy shrine of the Sikhs but to turn it into a fortress, amassing weapons and supplies to challenge the very might of the Indian army. The rest, as they say, is well-known history.

When I searched the web for a book on Operation Blue Star, this was one of those few that topped the list of reliable accounts. Having read this book, I could understand why. From briefing us about the early history of Punjab to describing those events that led to the crescendo that shook Delhi and caused deep divides in Indian society, it is all in here. Written in simple, flowing style, without being prejudiced against any of the parties involved in the conflict, this is a must-read for any lover of Indian history!

Thursday, July 11, 2019

Book Review - 21 Lessons for the 21st Century, Yuval Noah Harari*

With the first few chapters threatening with inevitable realities of anarchy, dystopia and digital apocalypse, I braced myself for a depressing read ahead. But as the pages progressed, the book lightened up and started instilling hope within me. One of the best books to read, if you are trying to make sense of all the idiocy in the world around and the idiosyncrasies of us humans.

Beginning at the macro levels of the universe and our planet, the book signs off by bringing us to the microcosm of our minds. The author stops just short of recommending meditation and self-awareness as the panacea for the current chaos all around. An intriguing read that any thinker will relish!

Wednesday, July 10, 2019

Book Review - Selected Stories by Bram Stoker

Selected Stories by Bram Stoker (Image Source - Google)
It is a good idea on the part of Rupa Publications to bring out little books containing short stories of renowned authors. This book forms a part of that series. The name of Bram Stoker needs no introduction. His literary classic Dracula is widely read and adapted in various media forms. This book containing a selection of his short stories goes on to prove that he was a master in the shorter form of story telling too. Each of the eight stories in this book evokes different emotions. While some make your heart race, some make your heart go mellow. Overall, a nice collection and a worthy tribute to a master like Bram Stoker!

Saturday, June 22, 2019

Book Review – Mother of 1084, Mahasweta Devi

Image Source - Google
We all have our own favorite ideologies. But then all of us face the practical realities of our daily lives as well. Despite our principles pressing us otherwise, we end up doing things that we don’t want to, living in ways that are contrary to how we wish. Few of us can claim to be leading lives in ways that are in perfect harmony with our principles. Rare such souls may be, every once in a while one such soul tries to bridge the gap between the ideal ways of life and the ground reality. Such rebels have either been revered or reviled. Either way, they leave a lasting impression on the pages of history. But what happens to those people who were near and dear to them, those family members, friends and acquaintances who could never understand what the push in the mind of the ideologues is all about, nevertheless love and support them, like those punctuation marks that silently add meaning and beauty to the literature of the lives of such rebels?

Mother of 1084 is a gripping story that narrates the emotions of a mother, who lost her son to the systematic brutality that claimed the lives of hundreds of youngsters during Operation Steeplechase in the 70’s Bengal. Brati was the ideal youngster who shunned the hypocritic ways of his family and gets absorbed in ideologies inspired by the Naxal movement that held Bengal in sway during that period. The story begins two years after his death in a police encounter, with his mother Sujata reminiscing about her son, right from the day of his birth. His mother, who couldn’t come to terms with the reason for her son’s death and the emotional, ideological bent that drove him to his death, tries to make sense of his absence by leaning on others who have undergone similar emotional trauma. She tries to do so by being friendly with the family of Somu, another youngster killed along with her son. She also meets up with Nandini, the girl who loved Brati and who subscribed to the same ideology as Brati.

With the rest of the family members all having forgotten Brati or trying to ignore their past with him, it is Sujata, as a mother, that feels the vacuum of his absence, day in and day out. The pain of her son’s death, her inability to ease the pains of other family members akin to her, the sadness of seeing lives like those of Nandini and Brati being wasted away in revolution that seemed to have changed nothing, including the hypocritical ways of her own family members – how Sujata faced them all in a single day is narrated in these pages in a riveting, deeply moving manner.

This is the first book of this author that I am reading and I have fallen in love with her writing already. The translation could have been better though. Spelling mistakes mar the flow too.

This is a book that portrays the anger that simmered through a whole generation of young minds that wanted to change the world around them. This is a book that also recounts the unfathomable anguish of a mother who lost her beloved son to the bullets, but who gets to understand him and grow close to him after he is gone. As books on one of the darkest phases of Bengal go, this must be one of the best!

Tuesday, June 11, 2019

App Recommendation #2 - HealthifyMe

Trust me. Not losing weight in the middle-age can cause almost equal amount of pain as losing love during the young age. Well, though that is an exaggeration, almost all of us have our own ideas about our ideal weight. Some of us want to shed some weight while for others, it is about adding. But any qualified nutritionist will tell you that the game of weights boils down to the count of calories. Yes, calories, the basic units of energy. Your weight can be calculated as a formula:

Weight Loss = Calories Intake < Calories Spent
Weight Gain = Calories Intake > Calories Spent

Simply put you spend more energy than you consume in the form of food, and you stand to lose weight. It is also the other way round. Of course, basic physical activity patterns and exercising also play a major role, but as science has proven, your diet plays a major role in your body weight ups and downs. So, how do we keep a track of our calories? There are plenty of apps available, but my favorite remains HealthifyMe. What makes this stand out from the rest is, being an Indian app, this gives you the whole list of Indian food items, which many of the other more famous apps don't do.

Not just food. You can track your water intake, your physical activity levels like workouts and steps taken, and your weight patterns - all for free. For a little premium, you can get a customised diet and weight loss plan too, though the free version itself can help you manage your weight well enough. If you have a fitness tracker, you can integrate the same with this too, which is an added advantage. 

The ranking system is quite a motivation, pitching you against fitness conscious people from around the country and, of course, from around the world. Simple interface, easy navigarion and inspiring to have in your app, provided you are really meaning to do something about your weight. Happy healthifying!

Saturday, June 8, 2019

App Recommendation #1 - Duolingo:

Smartphones have become an integral part of our lives. Though there are so many complaints about how they hijack our lives, for people who know how to use them, they can become invaluable tools. The following is my little attempt at sharing information about some of the useful ways in which you can put them to use. 


App Recommendation #1 - Duolingo:
Have you always wanted to learn a new language but never had the time or resources to do so? Look no further. Duolingo is a nice app that can help you learn a new language by just spending 5 minutes every day. It is free and it is fun. You can compete with people from across the globe or add your friends and compete against them. Duo, the little owl, is inspirational too!

Right now though, in Indian languages you can find only Hindi. For any other global languages, this app is the best tool. Happy learning! 😊

Friday, April 5, 2019

Book Review – Shyam, Devdutt Pattanaik

Shyam, Devdutt Pattanaik (Image Source - Google)
If one makes a list of top ten inventions that changed the fate of us humans, Gutenberg’s printing press is sure to find a place on that list. In an age where books were very few in numbers and access to information was the privilege of rich and mighty, Gutenberg’s press pushed the gates wide open, flooding the world with information. Even the most esoteric, restricted texts were made available to anyone with the intent and interest to read them.

Authors like Devdutt Pattanaik make an equal impact in the world of Hindu religious literature. While the great epics like Ramayana and Mahabharata have already been made accessible to all by various authors, there is still a vast portion of Hindu literature that is beyond the access and understanding of lesser mortals that can’t relish these works in their original Sanskrit form. Authors like Devdutt present such texts in beautifully simplified forms, in their own inimitable style, so that even the uninitiated can partake in the bliss of divine texts. This book ‘Shyam’ is one more such feather in his glorious cap.

Krishna – the very name fills one’s heart with bliss and piety. One of the most loved gods of the Hindu pantheon, Krishna is favorite across cultures, sects and ages. For children, he is a naughty playmate. For elderly women, he is a child that stirs up the motherly emotions in them. For women, he is the ultimate beloved. For men, well, can there be a better role-model?! For the elderly, he is God Incarnate, capable of liberating them from endless cycles of birth and death.

Bhagavatha captures the glory of his life in its whole magnitude. In ‘Shyam’, Pattanaik presents that glory in short and sweet tales that make reading an experience of pleasure. The little nuggets of information the author provides all long, right from mentioning the places of pilgrimage to explaining the great philosophy behind the events in Krishna’ life add to that pleasantness. If you love Krishna and can never have enough of reading about his life, then this book is for you. You can also gift this to your children to initiate them to the ways of Krishna. Bliss to read, pride to own.

Saturday, March 23, 2019

May We All Live!

As we go on making elaborate plans for the days and decades ahead, Life simply laughs and blows them all away like a house of cards. A silent nod from the beloved, grim expression on the doctor's face, a casual movement at the wrong moment, the arrival of good news at unexpected moments - all it takes to turn our lives upside down is one fleeting moment!

Stop worrying. Start living. Tell your beloved ones that you love them. Make peace with people that matter. Let go of those that don't. Do things that really make you happy. Prioritise the real priorities. Ignore the time-wasters. Focus on good health. Prioritise peace. Live well. And, when the 'time' comes, leave with a contented heart. Take care, you All!

Happy Weekend! 💗

Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Book Review - Hit Refresh, Satya Nadella

Hit Refresh, Satya Nadella (Image Source - Google)
Mr. Satya Nadella begins the afterword of the book with some serious questions of existential nature. He uses questions like, why am I here, why Microsoft exists and so on, to explain his points. Wish he had asked a similar question about the purpose of this book, clarifying himself before even penning the foreword, for this book is a potpourri of thoughts and ideas, all lying disorganised across the pages.

What is one allowed to expect from a book written by the CEO of a tech giant like Microsoft? Imagine. Microsoft rode to the pinnacle by leading the PC revolution. Then lost their reputation due to questionable, predatory business practices. They also lost revenue by not taking the explosion of market for mobile devices seriously. It was Microsoft that produced a ‘tablet’, well before Apple was even a force to reckon with. But they were not able to make enough people interested in it and lost out. The whole world was switching to mobile devices from PCs, but Microsoft sat basking in the past success, entering the market only at the point of saturation. Just as people were starting to write off Microsoft as another giant about to bite the dust, it turned the tables and rode to the forefront of the Cloud revolution. Today Microsoft has caught up with Amazon and provides cutting-edge cloud solutions to the customers, on par with Amazon’s AWS.

When a company has such eventful history, you expect the CEO to churn out a book full of management wisdom and interesting anecdotes. But this book happens to be a damp squib. This book is not a memoir/autobiography, since very little and only the essential information is shared about Mr. Nadella’s childhood in India, his migrating to the USA for studies and eventually for a job at Microsoft. This book deals about his elevation to the role of CEO and his attempts at changing the ‘culture’ – a word hackneyed to the point of irritation – in only a superficial manner. The book then delves into the future of computing – Artificial Intelligence, Machine Learning, Mixed Reality and Quantum computing – again as an overview without offering much to take in. The book ends by exuding positive beliefs about the future of technology and the co-existence of humans and AI. Trying to convey all these things at once, this book ends up being dull, uninspiring, repetitive and boring.

Incoherently and insipidly written, this is a book that you can safely skip.

Book Review - Why I Am A Hindu, Shashi Tharoor

Why I Am A Hindu, Shashi Tharoor (Image Source - Google)
I remember a line from the early days of my reading and it goes like this – ‘If a poet falls in love with you, you will forever be immortalised’. That was the feeling I had when I finished reading this book. On one side are trolls of social media, simply bashing you for any and every point that you express. The validity or otherwise of the point matters the least to them. All that they want is to put you down and insult you. They turn every debate into a bitter argument and leave a bad taste in the mouth. At the other end of the intellectual spectrum are people like Shashi Tharoor. These are the kind of people that you don’t normally mess with, or else they ‘immortalise’ you by writing in reams to prove how dumb you and your opinions are.

This book is co-authored by Shashi Tharoor, the intellect, and Shashi Tharoor, the politician. The intellect Shashi Tharoor begins the book beautifully, elaborating on the core tenets of Hinduism and all things that makes Hinduism not just a religion, but the very way of life worth emulating. Briefly delving on the probable origins of Hinduism, the challenges it faced all along its many millennia-old existence, the ways in which it overcame those challenges and the innumerable saints and holy personae that stand as shining beacons for all the virtues that Hinduism is all about. Ironically, Mr. Tharoor makes you feel proud about being Hindu, more than all the antics and assertions of the so-called saviours of the ‘Hindutva’ brigade.

The second and final part of the book are used by politician Shashi Tharoor, who uses it as a canvas to paint a poor – many times, correctly so – picture about his political opponents, especially those belonging to the Hindutva brigade. Starting from the patriarchs of RSS, Golwalkar and Savarkar, who used hatred for another religion to fuel the passion for their own, touching upon the somewhat sensible life of Deen Dayal Upadhyay, to the present day leaders of BJP, who rode upon paranoia and hatred of a huge scale to attain their political gains, Shashi Tharoor has ‘immortalised’ everyone with his systematic arguments against their narrow ideologies, setting them against the all-encompassing backdrop of Hinduism.

In an age of manipulation through fake-images and messages spread through social media, people have been taught to hate the real soldiers of India’s freedom struggle, forgetting that these ‘Hindutva’ proponents made little or no contribution during the struggle for India’s independence. But Shashi Tharoor is no pushover to let them go easily. His book is a timely and sensible argument against the malady that is ‘Hindutva’, a product of fear and paranoia.

Those belonging to Congress will be all praise for this book. Those supporting the BJP will call this book as biased. But any unbiased reader, especially a Hindu who loves his religion, but doesn’t allow that love to become a license to spew paranoia and hatred against practitioners of other religions, will find this book to be a worthy argument. A sensible read!

Saturday, January 26, 2019

Book Review - Poi Maan Karadu, Kalki R. Krishnamurthy

Poi Maan Karadu, Kalki (Image Source - Google)
A banyan tree inspires awe - be it in its own majestic size or in the pruned bonsai form. Authors like Kalki R. Krishnamurthy are like banyan trees in the Indian literary scene. I was quite surprised that a genius mind that churned out grand classics like 'Ponniyin Selvan' (The Son of Ponni) and 'Sivakamiyin Sabatham' (The Vow of Sivakami), spanning a thousand pages or even more, could write such a crisp and pocket-sized novel, in no way second to those grand works in terms of quality or fun.

This novella is a comic thriller that tells the story of Sengoda Koundar, who has earned some money through hard work and is so obsessed about it. Sempavalavalli is his lady love. Just as they express their love for one another and plan to get married, there arrives Kumari Pankaja, charming and suave, making Sengodan's mind waver a bit. But accompanying Pankaja are two of his relatives, who seem to be having nefarious intentions. What were their intentions? Did Sengoda Koundar fall prey to their wiles? Did he marry his lady love? What happened to his money? This book answers all these questions in typical Kalki style - fluid, quick-paced, interesting and entertaining.

A nice little appetizer ahead of all the serious reads planned for this year!

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

Book Review – Che Guevara: A Revolutionary Life, Jon Lee Anderson

‘What a man can be, he must be’

Che Guevara - A Revolutionary Life, Jon Lee Anderson (Image Source - Amazon.in)
Those were the words of American psychologist Abraham Maslow, a contemporary of Ernesto Guevara de la Serna-Lynch or, simply, ‘Che’. Little could have Maslow known then that a man would rise to global renown from the southernmost part of his own continent, trying to be what he could be – a revolutionary of the highest caliber. And in the process, that man would become one of the most dangerous enemies of Maslow’s homeland.

Che is relevant to Maslow for another reason too. In transforming himself from a radical reformist of one region into a global revolutionary, Che upturned Maslow’s famed pyramid of human needs. For Che, his socialist cause, self-actualization through Revolution, was the most primitive need while food, sleep, love of friends and family, or even personal safety, did all become luxuries. Power and position did not even figure in his scheme of things. Such was his commitment that he spurned all imaginable comforts like an ascetic, missed the opportunity to be with his dying mother, gave up the pleasures of being a doting father, a loving husband. All because he wanted to uplift the downtrodden and destitute, no matter which part of the world they belonged to.

There are people who adopt a cause and devote their lives to it. Then there are some who are born destined for the cause. Ernesto Che Guevara belongs to the latter category. His romantic passion towards his socialistic cause, the sheer determination with which he went about achieving it despite opposition from even closer quarters are all lessons for ages of young minds to come. This biography by Jon Lee Anderson is a comprehensive guide to understanding Che and his ways.

Writing the biography of any famous figure, let alone that of someone as charismatic as Che Guevara, is a tough task. Be too overawed by the person, the book runs the risk of becoming a hagiography. Be too distanced, one ends up presenting a dry tome, listing the chronological order of events. It takes a rare mind to treat the subject with respect and at the same time present a faithful perspective. Jon Lee Anderson manages to it pull off. Che is presented as he was, playful as a youngster, one who did sow his wild oats, flirting around, having casual flings, playful and funny. His maturing as a rebel, growth in his social consciousness that was assisted in great measure by his motorcycle journeys across the continent, first by himself and then with his friend Alberto Granado have all been presented in great measure. Che’s gradual pull into the volatile political situation of Central America, his introduction to Fidel, their collaboration in the guerilla war to liberate Cuba, Che’s ascension to the role of Minister of Industries, his life during those calm (before the storm) days in Cuba, his eventual return to the field – literally – to spread revolution around the world, the debacle at Congo, and the tragic-but-glorious end at the nondescript Bolivian village of La Higuera are all laid out in such detail that one can only wonder whether Jon Lee Anderson was present in the times of Che, documenting history as it unraveled. Tremendous efforts and research have gone into this book.

Che was a man so ahead of his time, just like every great human being that came before him. Like those great minds, political or otherwise, he had ideas that were too progressive to be grasped by his contemporaries. He was revered by many, feared by many more, loved by a lot of people, hated by equally so many, praised by multitude but understood completely by very few. Like the many heroes before him, he understood his strengths, realized his weaknesses, pushed his companions to emulate his strengths, strived to overcome his weaknesses, and led by being a shining example. Simply put, he practiced what he preached.

It won’t be a blasphemy, though an irony, to compare Che with Jesus Christ. Both men were born ahead of their times, amidst people too narrow-minded to think about purposes greater than themselves, hoped that the people around them would see the worth of their arguments, wanted to make humans realize their potential and become better, but in the end were left to carry the cross for the sins of people that were too petty-minded and incapable of appreciating their worth. While one man tried to achieve mass deliverance through love and peace, the other chose to use bullets. In the end, betrayal by their own people took them both to their graves. One emerged from his grave three days later and went on to become a god. The other took three decades and has attained an almost equal mystical status amidst droves of youngsters, even amongst those that don’t even know his complete name.

Whether Che’s methods were right or wrong is a topic for debate. But his place in the pages of human history, as a persona that future generations can look up to, is undisputed. This unbiased, authentic work by Jon Lee Anderson is an ultimate guide to that Heroic Guerilla’s life and times, as good as any autobiography that Che himself could have written. Must read, must own.

Sunday, January 6, 2019

Book Review - Copycat Marketing 101, Burke Hedges

When a friend of mine recently gifted me this book, I was hoping that this would be a nice little appetizer for the serious reading in the days ahead. Surfing through the first few page, I found them to be interesting too. But, as the pages progressed, all that hope and interest gave way to boredom and a sense of annoyance.

A potpourri of sorts, this book tries to be many things at once - self-help, business, finance, and finally and mainly, network marketing. The author emphasizes on network marketing as one of the trusted ways to become rich quick and on one's own terms. As if we haven't heard it all from those impassioned distributors trying to enroll us into their pyramid selling. In fact, a simple Google search will tell you that there have been people who have become millionaires through this mode, but this is not for everyone and not for everywhere.

Filled with anecdotes, jokes and a few inspirational quotes, this book is really for those people who are frantically searching for ways and means to become rich quick. And, if you take away those quotes, anecdotes and jokes, the rest of the book could be presented neatly in two A4-sized sheets. As for the serious readers, I wouldn't recommend this for any reason.

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

Happy New Year 2019!

Happy New Year 2019! (Image Source - https://cdn4.vectorstock.com/i/1000x1000/11/43/happy-new-year-2019-vector-20931143.jpg)
We humans have this tendency to demarcate our lives and celebrate it in so many ways. Festivals to flaunt our emotions, celebrations to mark the changing of seasons, commemoration days to remember the legends that walked amongst us, religious rituals, birthdays, anniversaries and what not! Today, the beginning of a New Year, is one such day that we all look forward to. Staying awake till midnight to see the clock hands converge, feeling the the end of one old, huge chunk of time and the arrival of a new, fresh phase, sharing good wishes with friends and relatives through calls and messages, falling asleep with buzzing minds are all things that make our new year celebrations.

But, apart from the change in calendars and diaries, and a holiday to spend away from the grind of our day-to-day lives, what else is special about this day? Just as I sat contemplating this question today, I found my mind returning to one answer again and again – Hope. It is hope that marks and makes this day special for us humans.

Seen through the glasses of pragmatism, today is in no way different from yesterday and nor from our morrows. The same Sun came up from the same direction. Our lives and daily activities do all take place in the same fashion. But there is something clearly visible in the faces and behavior of every person that we come across today. It is the gleam of hope - Hope that this year, this man-made chunk of Time, is going to be different from all the rest that went ahead of it. The hope that this year will be the one in which most, if not all, of our dreams are going to come true. The hope of being able to live our days to the fullest from now onwards, staying true to our ‘resolutions’. Hope that we will be spared of all the travails and turmoil that made our lives difficult in the days gone by. Hope of feeling peace and happiness in the next 365 days to follow.

As the hours tick away from the first day of this new year, here is my wish for you –

'Without letting it slip away when you begin the day tomorrow, may you keep that hope pinned to your hearts. Let that hope produce abundant positive emotions and energy within you. May that hope guide you towards your dreams and help you achieve your goals. May that hope lift you high and place you all at the high pedestals of life. May that hope fill you with good health and humour. May that hope spread among your friends and families, fill their hearts to the brim and make them spend the next twelve months in good health, immense peace, boundless joy, blessed with all the positive bounties of life.'

May you all have a blessed and blissful 2019!

Happy New Year 2024!

As the first Sun of 2024 went back home, I was busy preparing my new diary and journal, packing off the old ones to their crammed space insi...