Showing posts with label Book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book review. Show all posts

Monday, June 4, 2012

A Calendar Too Crowded By Sagarika Chakraborty


A Calendar Too Crowded By Sagarika Chakraborty
About The book:
A Calendar too Crowded is a collection of 25 short stories and poems, where the concept revolves around the celebratory days on the calendar we follow, where a large number of important days are dedicated to women or life in general where women play a major role. The attempt is not to highlight how in January, there’s a day in India dedicated to girl children, or how April has come to be officially declared as a month against sexual abuse throughout the world. The attempt is to delve deeper and analyze whether it is merely enough to rely on statistics and be complacent in the knowledge that the numbers indicate a better society in the making, or whether there is an urgent need to look beneath the covers and realize that despite all such dedicated days, there are 300 odd days when there is nothing special that life has to offer. Where each day is still an unending drudgery, where womanhood is cursed and trampled upon.
It is also an attempt to look into houses where everything looks picture perfect on the surface, but there are blatant cases of domestic violence and gender inequality that have been swept under the carpet for fear of tainting the family name and image. The attempt is to bring forth the bruises hidden beneath each lavishly draped body that need to be highlighted even on days which are not dedicated to campaigns against domestic violence. All the voices that have found expression in this book through their stories are nameless, because no name would justify a voice which represents millions. They transgress all boundaries of geography, religion, age and caste to become one voice— the voice of womanhood. Each and every voice in these stories can be connected to any woman you see around you and they seek to say that all women deserve to be happy every day of the year, because every day in the calendar of every woman’s life is precious, just like yours.
Highlights of the book: • The book revolves about the central theme of womanhood and is the first of its kind where the entire lay out has been based on the theme of a calendar. • The stories are spun around the days attributed to women and children – Mother’s Day, Women’s Day, National Day for Girl Child • The book at ISB Hyderabad was launched by Ashwin Sanghi – Ashwin while lauding the efforts that has gone into making of the book also felt that he related to the theme of the book. He emphasized that “Both my two novels revolve around the theme of Shakti/Nari and somehow thus the very fact that here too women on the whole is the centre and the effort is to showcase the drudgery they go through, yet the strength they retain, makes me feel connected to it”. • The book was jointly launched at ISB, Hyderabad on January 11th 2012 by Ashwin Sanghi and Dean , Ajit Rangnekar • The book is also set for a special mention at the upcoming Hyderabad Literary Festival, 2012 (January 17, 2012)

Release Type: Print, Soft Cover Price: Rs. 295 Binding: Soft Cover Imprint: 1st Edition Genre: Fiction Page Extent: 189 pages Pub Date: January 2012 (Niyogi Books, New Delhi) Territory: Indian

QUOTES FROM EMINENT READERS:
ASHWIN SANGHI : "Sagarika's writing is gut-wrenching. It reaches deep within and makes you wonder why deep-rooted gender biases persist. A Calendar Too Crowded is not for the fainthearted but is certainly a work that needs to be read, particularly by someone like me who has personally experienced the power of Shakti and the sacred feminine." VINAY PATHAK : Actor Vinay Pathak, when told that the story “Sisters by Choice” had drawn inspiration from his struggle of adoption picked up the book and gave reviews on two stories. Sisters by Choice: “Got my book in mail today. And the first story I read was sisters by choice. I can't begin to tell u the emotional journey it took me onto. Needless to say very well written. The emotional quotient u arrived at was very poignant n touching. Naked: The prose has a poetic and a poignant mystique that gives the reader a whole lot to ponder....
DILEEP JHAVERI “Inspite of witnessing all that we have failed to acknowledge, is observed in detail by Sagarika. She has read fears hidden behind, apparently placid security of middle class mind. But, she transcends time and class with changing narrative styles, sharpness of statements, satire, surprises, sensuality and sense of history and mythology. As a woman she confronts life and as a human being conquers death!”
ALAKNANDA ROY “We all wanted to just come and see if Sagarika is really 27 after reading the book. It gave us shivers and yet we couldn’t put it down. The way she connects the life of a woman from pre natal stages to death is not only wonderful but gives us the solace that young writers like her are there who shall guide the society.”

About the Author: Sagarika Chakraborty, born in Kolkata, studied law at National Law University, Jodhpur and is currently studying management at Indian School of Business, Hyderabad. Her projects and numerous articles on diverse subjects—corporate governance principles with special emphasis on emerging and transition economies, globalization, ethics, monetary economics, religion—have been published in Indian and international publications. She has presented papers on E-Governance, corporate law principles, sexual harassment, asset pricing models at international conferences and global forums in Sydney, Glasgow, Korea, Wellington and Washington D.C. Her paper on E-Governance in India, has been appreciated in the ‘Working Paper series’ of the World Bank and she has also won the ‘Best Economic Crisis—Paper Award’ at the World Summit on Economic Financial Crisis and International Business, 2009, held at Washington D.C. Looking into her contribution in the domain of policy work she was recently awarded Fellowship by the Royal Society of Arts, UK. Apart from delving into serious research work, she has also written light fiction/poetry for various online and print media, and is an avid salsa enthusiast. This is her first book.

Thursday, February 23, 2012

Kiran Manral's The Reluctant Detective A humorous story that women will enjoy.

BOLLYWOOD ACTRESS TISCA CHOPRA JOINED AUTHOR KIRAN MANRAL FOR READING OF HER BOOK, THE RELUCTANT DETECTIVE PUBLISHED BY WESTLAND LTD Mumbai, 24th February 2012: Bollywood Actress Tisca Chopra joined the Author of the latest modern contemporary popular fiction book Kiran Manral for a READING SESSION of her book THE RELUCTANT DETECTIVE, followed by a conversation with Author Parul Sharma AT Bungalow 9, Mumbai. Tisca Chopra read a passage from the book which was then followed by a discussion regarding the same.
Release Type: Original Price: ` 195 Binding: Paperback Imprint: Westland Genre: Fiction Page Extent: 184 pp
Kay, aka Kanan Mehra, is a thirty-something suburban housewife, and young mother with a penchant for sticking her curious nose into things she definitely, absolutely and certainly shouldn’t go near. When a couple of corpses turn up in quick succession in her neighbourhood, she teams up with her detective friend, Runa, in a half-hearted attempt to find the murderers, only to suspect that perhaps the detective business doesn’t quite become her. A hilarious account of how not to get involved in other people’s murders, The Reluctant Detective is every school-gate mom, searching for a purpose to her life beyond kitty lunches, shopping and fish pedicures.
About the Author Kiran Manral is a freelance writer, blogger and media consultant who lives in Mumbai with her family. She is also the founder of India Helps, a volunteer network which works with disaster victims. The author is a well known journalist. She also runs a blog that is very popular. Hence she can market the book via her media contacts and on the Internet

Sunday, February 19, 2012

“ Stupid Guy Goes to India”- Yukichi Yamamatsu

“ Stupid Guy Goes to India”- Yukichi Yamamatsu
Genre: Graphic Novel
Stupid Guy Goes to India by Yukichi Yamamatsu translated from Japanese by Kumar Sivasubramanian Release Type: Original Price: ` 395 Binding: Paperback, Manga style Imprint: Blaft/Westland Genre: Graphic Novel Page Extent: 230 pp Pub Date: February 2012 Territory: Indian sub-continent About the Book : In 2004, having never before left Japan, 56-year-old manga author Yukichi Yamamatsu travelled to India,armed with little money, less English, no sigmoid colon, and absolutely no idea of what to expect. He did, however, bring with him his formidable art skills, a missionary zeal for spreading Japanese comics culture, and a keen pair of eyes -- through which we are treated to a hilarious, brutally honest look at India as it presents itself to the foreign visitor.
This is the true story of Yukichi’s adventures – playing marbles, searching for bathrooms, betting on horses, visiting a brothel -- and his madcap mission to sell Hindi translations of samurai manga on the mean streets of the nation’s capital.
About the Author Yukichi Yamamatsu was born in Tottori Prefecture, Japan, in 1948. After leaving junior high school, he moved through a variety of jobs in quick succession before selling his first manga manuscript to an Osaka publisher at the age of 16. He has been an acclaimed mangaka for over four decades. Stupid Guy Goes to India, his autobiographical account of his first visit to India, was first published in Japanese in 2008.
About The Translator Kumar Sivasubramanian is an Indian-born Canadian currently living in Melbourne, Australia. He moved to Japan in 1998 and did his first professional translation in 2002. He has since translated over sixty volumes of manga from Japanese to English, including such series as Old Boy, Blade of the Immortal, and Summit of the Gods. He is also an English Language Consultant for the anime production company Sunrise Inc, and he is the writer of the webcomic Weird Crime Theater.

Monday, November 28, 2011

The Politics of Climate Change Praful Bidwai

*The Politics of Climate Change and the Global Crisis*: *Mortgaging Our Future*, has just been published by Orient BlackSwan. I would like to invite you to the launch function in Bangalore with a panel discussion, at The Crossword Bookstore, Residency Road, at 6 pm on Wednesday, Nov 30. An invitation card from the publisher is attached. I look forward to seeing you. Best regards, Praful Bidwai