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GETTING HIGH WITH NOVELS FROM BOOKWORM CAFE

Posted by adrainsean on November 29, 2007

I’ve been obsessed with with novels these days and yesterday i was able to count a stunning 15 books that i’ve finished off, only some of them noteworthy through the past one month. Our library is big, i mean BIGG… and you would meet the great-grand-son of my grand-son to finish off a section alone. Aisles of noteworthy crap and everytime i go there, i can hear intellectual authors screaming out from the racks. The entire structure is huge, and u can stare at it for a good two minutes before you take your eyes off. And then there are the new sports complex and basketball court… DARN!!… i’m off track. I’ve started off with something related to novels.. didn’t i?..

so.. Why am i so engrossed in reading stuff?.. ah well… lets put it in my words.. it’s darn unique way of expressing something – perhaps the author’s quest for some answer, perhaps an idea he/she would like to convey, perhaps a critique on the society or on humanity, perhaps to narrate a real history of real people. The list, is endless as is the scope of a novel or even the sparse lines of a short story. That really makes sense.. doesn’t it?.

But then, Hitler is a real mind screwer long after he’s dead for god sake. I’ve read his Mein Kampf (thats ‘My-Freakin-story’ in german) long ago when i were a teeny weeny lingo enthusiast churning and masticating every other novel that came my way. And i came over a hard copy of it recently. I mean it.. the guy is a genius. I was a schmuck to read carefully all the views.. remember reading his concepts of an ideal square jawed race with right amouts of conviction and ideals that must be destined to rule the world.

And then there are ‘Rage of Angels’ and ‘The dooms day conspiracy‘ that i’ve borrowed from arvind.

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BORN IN BROTHELS:ANURAG KASHYAP

Posted by adrainsean on November 21, 2007

I am sure you haven’t been able to sleep at night for the past few days. I have received many an email, reeking of tears and other bodily fluids, imploring me to post something, anything. I received missed calls at ungodly hours waking me up from surreal dreams. Well, I exaggerated just a little bit there, just like any sincere blogger would, but you get the drift. Comcast (ISP and Cable provider) would like to extend their apologies to you. I came home one day from work to find the W sprawled on the floor looking at the modem like it was a Rubik’s cube that was winking at him with its six little lights (LED’s for geeks) in random order and the 42 displaying a depressing “There is no service” or something morose like that, which was more suited on a tombstone.

The W went into depression, thus exhibiting the 21st century man’s extreme reliance on the World Wide Web, much like an addict’s manic craving for a hit during withdrawal. The Internet has trapped the average non-suspecting citizen of society (bespectacled and otherwise) into its Web (Ever wonder why its called Web?). While I was feeling bad about not being able to blog and thus spread yuletide and joy among my readers, as I have come to do in the past month or so, the sadistic mind wanted to see the W writhe in mental agony as he fidgeted from the couch to balcony, and then back to the couch with periodic mutterings of ‘Life is so depressing’.

This reminded me of those days back in Calcutta, almost two decades back when we were hit by regular bouts of what was commonly known as “load shedding”, when I got breaks from mugging up Bangla chhora (children’s poems) about bullock carts in lands that existed only in my reluctant imagination to carefully make my way up to our terrace with the help of a candle to cuddle up next to Amma (my paternal grandmother) and watch the often star studded sky. She loves the sky and actually wanted to christen me Akash (and still refers to me that way in moments of extreme affection) but my parents thought the name was too common and shot the idea down, but that’s a whole different family controversy.

An improvement in the economic situation meant that inverters gave us the feeling of pseudo “load sheddings” since only certain lights were allowed to be on but no fans, before we officially broke into the upper middle class with a generator which took away the whole experience altogether. Along with the summer sweat of “load sheddings”, also disappeared the romantic charm of the darkness and the clear sky. Net failures are the “load sheddings” of our generation, albeit with a less cooler name. Who knows, maybe I will recite the story of the W and the lost Net to my grandchildren some day when the Internet will be replaced by something stronger, faster and more secure, unless we manage to destroy the world before that.

Came across Anurag Kashyap’s blog today (thanx Google!). I have become a fan of the man after watching No Smoking recently. Reading some of the blog postings did nothing to lessen the sentiment. The postings are as honest as his films and his writing, often written after a few pegs have been downed, thus often without apparent regard for grammar. He can come across as bitter and arrogant, but I think he is just angry and frustrated more than anything else, and the reasons he spells out affected me a bit the same way, surprising me.

He talks about the sorry state of independent films in India and being a cinema enthusiast, I could only reflect how empty life would be without delightful little indigenous films like Bheja Fry, Johnny Gaddar and of course No Smoking being made; about how this discourages paranoid people like me who go to bed with film making dreams in their eyes every night to abandon their current semi-luxuriant lives to give shape to their abstract ambitions; about going through life without ever coining the words job and satisfaction in the same breath. I was so absent-minded, I even honked at a pickup that did not turn when the light to go straight turned green.

To make matters worse, right now Born Into Brothels is showing me the half-baked dreams of the unwanted children of the sex workers of Calcutta on the 42. Its showing me hope in their eyes that has a very slim chance of being converted into reality, even with the film maker’s magnanimous attempts on a relatively small sample space of such individuals. What are striking are the matter-of-fact of some of the children when talking about their dead or socially reclusive parents and some of their artistic talents. The W laughs at my theory that some of the kids are so talented because their fathers are gifted individuals of the high strata of society we reside in. Damn! why did Com cast have to correct their mistake?

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Inheritance of loss:Kiran desai

Posted by adrainsean on November 4, 2007

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No will is required to become the heir of loss…the loss which had been the tradition, refusing to change, to give way to happiness, and one learns to live with it, to be happy, accepting it as not a loss, but something that is forever, inherently…a necessity.
Sai, the teenage orphan, who never experienced the luxury of parental love, has to drop out of parental love, has to drop out of boarding school to move to her grandfather, Jemubhai Patel’s house. The story unfolds in the beautiful reaches of Kalimpong, revolving around their lives, together with the house cook and his son, Biju. Her grandfather doesn’t make Sai’s life any better through his cold blooded heart. He was a father whom her mother never had. He had vacated her mother of the love that her parents had for Sai.
The adventure of love begins for Sai, when Gyan, a Nepali, takes up the responsibility of becoming her home tutor. Their love blossoms until there rises an insurgency in the hills and the agitated Gorkhas restore to violence to win the privileges that have been denied to them. Gyan has to make a choice, which will decide Sai’s future.
Sai, still hopeful for a happy future, awaits Gyan. Jemubhai is losing the continuous fight against the memories of his past life. Biju is away abroad, struggling in the other world, heart still with his father in India. They are different people belonging to different worlds. But loss and hope tie the together in a weak but intact thread.
Kiran Desai brings to us a masterpiece, funny at times when she delves into the hearts of the innocent post independence India; passionate in her idea of love prevailing in the most unusual situations, and hopeful that one day they will have a choice, the life’s wand in their hands.

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