This is the first political thriller I’ve read in my life and this
page-turner held my rapt attention till I read the very last page! Prisoner,
Jailor, Prime Minister is a racy political story with many twists and
turns. It is about Harvard-educated Siddhartha Tagore, who catapults into
political centrestage after being spotted by ‘Lok Neta’ in New York, years
after his illustrious father’s demise. Tagore is also a rare musical genius-
combining the talents of Mozart and Tansen! He is the first rock-star Prime
Minister of India and a true Tibet-lover with strong views against China and
Pakistan. He is one whom Providence saves from an assassination attempt at his
loved place- Tibet, while he was Leader of Opposition. In fact how this alongwith
Lok Neta’s sudden death gets him to enter 7 RCR makes for a great political
story. Tagore is a firm Constitution protector and will do anything it takes to
stop the country being sabotaged by his right-wing opponents- who want a
radical Constitutional change.
It's me- my victories, my confusions, my feelings, my love, my hatred, my ugliness, my purity, my ecstasy- it's my life.........
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Books. Show all posts
March 17, 2014
Book Review :: What Young India Wants by Chetan Bhagat
Flipkart has this... |
‘What Young India Wants’ is the first attempt by the best selling
author of ‘cool’ racy novels like 5 Point Someone, 2 States, 3
Mistakes of My Life and so on to write non-fiction on the harsh
challenges facing India. Through this book of 181 pages only, he tries
to make discussion of these serious topics the ‘new cool’ (after
tragedy of course, for those who have watched the 2 States movie
trailer!) among youth of India.
author of ‘cool’ racy novels like 5 Point Someone, 2 States, 3
Mistakes of My Life and so on to write non-fiction on the harsh
challenges facing India. Through this book of 181 pages only, he tries
to make discussion of these serious topics the ‘new cool’ (after
tragedy of course, for those who have watched the 2 States movie
trailer!) among youth of India.
January 19, 2014
BOOK REVIEW: The Honest Always Stand Alone – C G Somiah
Distinguished IAS Officer of 1953 batch, CG Somiah, who
retired as CAG of India in 1996, has penned his autobiography in the form of
the book ‘The Honest Always Stand Alone’. The title reveals a lot and matches
my personal take in life too. That is why from Insights’ link on ‘Must-read
books of Indian bureaucrats’, I picked this one (apart from a few others).
Mainly portraying his career’s illustrious and most fulfilling achievements,
this book has brilliant personal anecdotes and how being honest and upright, he
has stood up to every challenge faced by him.
January 9, 2014
Book Review: Being Indian- Pavan K.Varma
Flipkart
Amazon
We are Indian. Still, have we ever tried to analyze those fundamental traits which make us so? Those compelling characteristics of our society and life as Indians, which refuse to leave us even in the farthest foreign lands? Pavan K.Varma, a seasoned Indian diplomat, gives an insightful and delightful analysis through his book ‘Being Indian’, on what makes Indians operate within and outside the chaotic democracy of a billion plus people, and why the 21st century will be India’s, precisely due to those very same fundamental characteristics of Indians ingrained in their DNA.
This fantastic read consists of 213 pages, excluding Notes (consisting of an elaborate list of books/articles by established authors, leaders, administrators etc. referred for writing each chapter), Copyright Acknowledgements and Index. It is divided into six chapters starting with ‘Introduction’ where he tries to separate the reality from the image of India. He highlights what questions the book seeks to answer, methodology followed and basic traits of Indians such as retaining hope even in the toughest circumstances and resilience that comes due to continuous exposure to adversity, to name a few. Then through the next chapters i.e. ‘Power’, ‘Wealth’, ‘Technology’, ‘Pan-Indianness’, the author goes on to unpeel layer-by-layer the Indian psyche and how they tick and succeed. Finally in the ‘Epilogue’ the author suggests what needs to be done to unleash the potential of Indians so that the 21stcentury certainly and much faster, becomes India’s.
Amazon
We are Indian. Still, have we ever tried to analyze those fundamental traits which make us so? Those compelling characteristics of our society and life as Indians, which refuse to leave us even in the farthest foreign lands? Pavan K.Varma, a seasoned Indian diplomat, gives an insightful and delightful analysis through his book ‘Being Indian’, on what makes Indians operate within and outside the chaotic democracy of a billion plus people, and why the 21st century will be India’s, precisely due to those very same fundamental characteristics of Indians ingrained in their DNA.
This fantastic read consists of 213 pages, excluding Notes (consisting of an elaborate list of books/articles by established authors, leaders, administrators etc. referred for writing each chapter), Copyright Acknowledgements and Index. It is divided into six chapters starting with ‘Introduction’ where he tries to separate the reality from the image of India. He highlights what questions the book seeks to answer, methodology followed and basic traits of Indians such as retaining hope even in the toughest circumstances and resilience that comes due to continuous exposure to adversity, to name a few. Then through the next chapters i.e. ‘Power’, ‘Wealth’, ‘Technology’, ‘Pan-Indianness’, the author goes on to unpeel layer-by-layer the Indian psyche and how they tick and succeed. Finally in the ‘Epilogue’ the author suggests what needs to be done to unleash the potential of Indians so that the 21stcentury certainly and much faster, becomes India’s.
Book Review: THE WHITE TIGER – Aravind Adiga
Aravind Adiga won the Booker Prize in 2008 for writing the book ‘The White Tiger‘.
I was always curious to know what was in it, and how this first-time
fiction won the prestigious award. Once I started reading the book, I
discovered it was un-putdownable! Written in an angry rustic tone with a
lot of dark humour and satire, the author convincingly tells the tale
of ‘The White Tiger’, an entrepreneur in the IT hub of Bangalore in a
most unimaginably creative manner- the entrepreneur speaks in the first
person and narrates his story in letters written every night addressed
to none other than- Wen Jiabao- the then Premier of China! The interesting title, ‘The White Tiger‘, literally means that rare ‘creature born once in a generation‘-a
name given to the street-smart protagonist when he answered all
questions rightly, posed to him, by the school inspector in a remote
village of Bihar.
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