Comfortably Numb

Sheila Kumar's Storehouse

Excerpts: Suspected Poems by Gulzar

Suspected Poems by Gulzar. Translated by Pavan K Varma.      

Book review: Standing on an Apple Box by Aishwaryaa Rajnikanth Dhanush

This is more a brief take than review. STANDING ON AN APPLE BOX by AISHWARYAA RAJINIKANTH DHANUSH. HarperCollins India Publishers. Things we learn from these winning essays by one who just happens to be the daughter of a Living Legend (come on, this calls for capitals!) and the wife of a shining star in the Tamil firmament:…

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Book review: Walking The Himalayas by Levison Wood

Walking the Himalayas by Levison Wood. Hodder Books/Hachette India. A couple of disclaimers need to be inserted at the start of this review. One, I`m a sucker for any book that has the word `Himalayas` in its title. Two, the rather edifying jacket pic played its part in my picking up this book. That aside,…

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Book review: Songs of the Cauvery by Kalyanaraman Durgadas

  The flow of life By the banks of the Cauvery in Tamil Nadu, a set of people try to make sense of their life and times.  As the nineteenth century draws to a close and the twentieth appears on the horizon, India`s freedom struggle is fast gaining traction. This story is set in the…

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Book review: Sepia Leaves and Interview with author Amandeep Sandhu

 Sepia Leaves by Amandeep Sandhu. Rupa Publications. This book was written in 2008 but the topic, sadly, is one that never really goes out of date or loses its relevance. I say `sadly` because the subject matter here is one weighted with sorrow. Sandhu`s book is the account of an eight-year-old boy in Rourkela who…

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Book review: Two by Two by Nicholas Sparks

An easy read Two by Two is the twentieth novel of bestselling author Sparks, and that`s no mean feat. As everyone on Planet Earth knows, Sparks made his name and fame with that  romantic tear-jerker, The Notebook, and followed that up with many international bestsellers in the same genre, playing to strength, as it were….

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Book review: Askew, a Short Biography of Bangalore by TJS George

Cry, the beloved city It is neither compulsory nor mandatory but I feel the need to make this admission: I am not an outsider. Though not of Kannada origin, I have been a resident of Bangalore/Bengaluru since the start of the 80s. That`s been over three decades, during which I have lived, worked, married, learned…

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Book review: Bridget Jones`s Baby by Helen Fielding

This is more a brief take than review. Bridget Jones`s Baby The Diaries by Helen Fielding More of stir-crazy Bridge and her pals Shazzer, Tom, Miranda, Magda. More of the craziness. More of the longing. More of the torn betwixt still-the- cad Daniel Cleaver and the rod-up-his-arse Mark Darcy.  A chucklesome read. There is, but…

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Book review: Show Me A Mountain by Kerry Young

At the crossroads Show Me A Mountain is the final book in a trilogy written by Kerry Young over a period of thirteen years, but perfectly readable as a standalone story. Set in the Jamaica of the mid 1930-60s, it is a portrait in words of the life of Fay Wong, a portrait that takes…

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Book review: The Book of Shiva by Ravi Shankar Etteth

The Book of Shiva by Ravi Shankar Etteth. A Harper Element publication. This then is a spiritual travelogue. You can, if you wish, make comparisons to Phaedrus` journey in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance. Or, at a long stretch, Alex Garland`s  revelations in The Beach. Be that as it may, here we have…

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