Monday, 29 December 2008
Sunday, 28 December 2008
Making Your Mind Up
Read this awesome book by Jill Mansell, it will give a few good laughs to brighten up your day. Smooth, easy reading, perfect for a siesta in your veranda.
When you're a teenager in love with a wildly unsuitable boy, you expect your parents to object. But Lottie is thirty now, a full- fledged grown up, and she never imagined her children doing the same when she Tyler Klein. He isn't wildly unsuitable, he's a catch. But as far as Nat and Ruby are concerned, he's the devil incarnate.
What's a girl to do? Is she only allowed to associate with men who meet with their approval? And doesn't she already have enough to worry about, what with errant ex- husband Mario upto his old tricks, beloved boss Freddie determined to catch up with old friends before life catches up with him, and best friend Cressida brazenly propositioning strangers in sghops?
Everyone else needs sorting out. Well, that's fine- it's what Lottie is best at. Until the day she discovers that an attack of the hiccups can have the power - just possibly- to change your life...
Monday, 22 December 2008
Memories
The change is upon us now
Something deep inside
Hazy thoughts of yesterday
Dreams we cannot hide.
Like a wondrous, touching film
We see through colored glass
The lazy days of summer
The joy of summers past.
The first day of autumn
A castle on the sands
A monument to memories
To life held in our hands.
Wednesday, 10 December 2008
Gods, Demons and Others
In the legends, where all things are possible, one thousand years seem only a second, and good ultimately triumphs over evil. The Devi, who is the personification of the highest beauty and energy, vanquishes the demon Manisha who has invaded the heavens: Manmata, the god of love, is burned up physically when he enrages the austere god Shiva. Yama, the god of death, is persuaded for the first time to relinquish a soul when the mourning but determined Savitri pleads for the return of her husband.
The spectacle of battle, the fascinating mystery of the supernatural, the passion, devotion and laughter of love, the quest of the spirit for eternity- such are the ingredients of the legends. And Narayan's retelling evokes them all with superb skill to provide the reader a treasury of enchanting myths which have for centuries painted the landscape of Indian life and mind.
The Mahabharata
The great Indian epic the Mahabharata is at least 3,500 years old. In its original in the Sanskrit language it runs to one hundred thousand stanzas in verse- by far the longest of the world's epics. Also, together with the Ramayana it embodies the very essence of Indian cultural and religious heritage, laying down values of individual life and society which have shaped the texture of Indian life.
The Mahabharata fairly bursts with an astonishing treasure of riches. At one level it is a great tale with a huge, truly memorable cast of vivid characters- men, noble and ignoble, warriors, saints, kings and women of beauty. Unbearable sacrifice, shining nobility, great courage and virtue, insatiable greed, satanic hatred and sinister intrigue are all part and parcel of the dynastic struggle between two branches of a family which culminates in a bloody eighteen- day war on the plain of Kurukshetra.
At another level, the tragic battle of Kurukshetra symbolises man's constant struggle to distinguish between right and wrong, of choosing correct action over misdeed- issues tackled in the Bhagvadgita which forms a part of this epic and which is perhaps the single most influential scripture of Indian philosophic thought and spiritual understanding.
R.K. Narayan's splendid retelling offers the modern reader a magnificent initiation into the Mahabharata. With the consumate skill of a great writer, he recreates the rythm and grandeur of this epic which has endured through the ages with stonishing vitality.
The Client
Here's another by John Grisham...
Eleven- year old Mark Sway and his younger brother were sharing a forbidden cigarette when a chance encounter with a suicidal lawyer left Mark knowing a bloody and explosive secret: the whereabouts of the most sought - after dead body of America.
Now mark is caught between a legal system gone mad and a mob killer desperate to cover up his crime. And his only alibi is a woman named Reggie Love, who has been a lawyer for the past four years.
Prosecutors are willing to break all the rulers to make Mark talk. The Mob will stop at nothing to keep him quiet. And Reggie will do anything to protect her client- even make a last, desperate gamble that could win Mark his freedom... or claim both their lives.
Saturday, 22 November 2008
I was talking to a moth the other evening
He was trying to break into an electric light bulb
And fry himself on the wires
why do you fellows pull this stunt I asked him
Because it is conventional for moths
Or why if that had been an uncovered candle instead of an electric light bulb
You would now be a small unsightly cinder
Have you no sense
Plenty of it he answered
But at times we get tired of using it
We get bored with the routine
And crave beauty and excitement
Fire is beautiful
And we know that if we get too close it will kill us
But what does it matter
It is better to be happy for a moment
And be burned up with beauty
than to live a long time
And be bored all the while
So we wad all our life up into one little roll
And then we shoot the roll
That is what life is for
It is better to be a part of beauty for one instant
And then to cease to exist than to exist forever
And never be a part of beauty.
-Unknown
On the Death of Anne Bronte
There is little joy in life for me,
And little terror in the grave;
I’ve lived the parting hour to see
Of one I would have died to save.
Calmly to watch the failing breath,
Wishing each sigh might be the last;
Longing to see the shade of death
O’er those beloved features cast;
The cloud, the stillness that must part
The darling of my life from me;
And then to thank God from my heart,
To think Him well and fervently;
Although I knew that we had lost
The hope and glory of our life;
And now, benighted, tempest- tossed,
Must bear alone the weary strife.
- Charlotte Bronte
Charlotte Bronte
Charlotte Bronte who was born in 1816, was the eldest of 3 sisters who lived in their father's parsonage at Haworth on the Yorkshire moors. Their home's remoteness and their lack of any companionship outside the family, as Charlotte said, to be ' wholly dependent on ourselves and each other, on books and study for the enjoyments and occupational of life.' And amongst their activities ' the highest stimulus, as well as the liveliest pleasure we knew from childhood upwards, lay in attempts at literary composition. In 1845 they managed, with great difficulty, to publish a volume of their poems under the pseudonyms Currer, Ellis and Acton Bell. Each of them then set to work on novels, Charlotte (Currer) writing 'The Professor' and 'Jane Eyre', Anne (Acton) 'Agnes Gray', and Emily (Ellis) 'Wuthering Heights'.
'Jane Eyre' was the first to appear in print- in 1847 the year, also, of Thackeray's 'Vanity Fair' and Disraeli's 'Tancred'. It quickly became one of the most talked about novels of the day, while 'Wuthering Heights' which also followed later in the same year, was for a long time regarded as an earlier and cruder attempt by the same author. Emily and Anne Bronte died soon afterwards, but Charlotte wrote 2 more novels, 'Shirley' in1849 and 'Vilette', a re- handling of the material used in 'The Professor', in1853. In 1854 she married her father's curate, Rev. A.B. Nicolls, but died a few months later.
Monday, 17 November 2008
The Firm
This can be termed undoubtedly the best from John Grisham as of yet...
When Mitch McDeere signed on with Bendini, Lambert and Locke of Memphis, he thought he and his beautiful wife Abby were on the way. The firm leased him a BMW, paid off his school loans, arranged a mortgage, and hired him a decorator. Mitch McDeere should have remebered what his brother Ray- doing fifteen years in a Tennessee jail- already knew. You never got nothing for nothing. Now the FBI has the lowdown on Mitch's firm and needs his help. Mitch is caught between a rock and a hard place, with no choice- if he wants to live.
Monday, 3 November 2008
Jane Eyre
Orphaned Jane Eyre endures an unhappy childhood, hated by her aunt and cousins and then sent to the comfortless Lowood School. But life there improves, and Jane stays on as a teacher, though she still longs for love and friendship. At Mr. Rochester's house, where she goes to work as a governess, she hopes she might have found them- until she learns of the terrible secret of the attic.
Charlotte Bronte with this masterpiece has captured the hearts of millions- including mine. She is truly, a jewel among the Bronte sisters.
Wuthering Heights
Heathcliff, a wiaf found on the streets of Liverpool, is brought home to the Yorkshire moors by Mr. Earnshaw and raised a sone of his own children. Hindley despises and ill- treats him, but wild Cathy becomes his constant comapnion, and he falls violently in love with her. But when she will not marry him, Heathcliff's terrible venegeance ruins them all- but still his and Cathy's love will not die. Considered to be a crude model on sister Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights by Emily Bronte too marks a niche for itself.
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall
The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Bronte is a powerful and sometimes violent novel of expectation, love, oppression, sin, religion and betrayal. It potrays the disintegration of the marriage of Helen Huntingdon, the mysterious 'tenant' of the title, and her dissolute, alcoholic husband. Defying convention, Helen leaves her husband to protect their young son form his father's influence, and earns her own living as an artist. Whilst hiding at Wildfell Hall, she encounters Gilbert Markham, who falls in love with her.
Jeffrey Archer
Jeffrey archer was educated at Oxford University. He became the youngest member of the House of Commons in 1969, was appointed Deputy Chairman of the Conservative Party in 1985, and was elevated to the House of Lords in 1992. All his novels and short story collections- including Kane and Abel, Honour Among Thieves, and to Cut a Long Story Short- have been international bestsellers, selling over 120 million copies worldwide. Archer is married with two children and lives with England.
Kane and Abel
Shall we Tell the President
Saturday, 1 November 2008
The Eleventh Commandment
Connor Fitzgerald is the professional's professional. Holder of the Medal of Honour. Devoted family man. Servant of his country. The CIA's most deathly weapon. But for the past 28 years, Fitzgerald has been leading a double life. And only days from his retirement from the Agency, he comes across an enemy even he cannot handle. The enemy, is his own boss, the Director of the CIA. And she has only one purpose: to destroy him. Meanwhile, the Unites States is faced with an equally formidable foe: a new Russioan President, determined to force a military confrontation between the two superpowers.
Ranging form the oval office in the White House to the Russian Mafia's secret luxurious hideaway outside St. Petersburg, the Eleventh Commandment sets new standards in contemporary thriller writing by Jeffrey Archer.
Wednesday, 29 October 2008
Jack London
The life of Jack London (1876- 1916) reads exactly like the plot of one of his adventure stories. He was born John Chaney, the illegitimate son of an itinerant Irish- American astrologer and Flora Wellman, the black sheep of a well- to- do family. Before Jack was one year old, Flora had married a groccer called John London and settled into a life of poverty in Pennsylvania.
Young Jack increasingly found escape from the grimness in his surroundings in books borrowed from the local library; his reading was guided by the kindly local librarian. But when he was only fifteen, he left home and travelled around North America as a tramp. He even served thirty days in prison once on a charge of vagrancy.
By the time he was nineteen, he could drink and curse as well as his fellow boatmen in California. but he had never lost his love of reading, and his socialist creed also stressed the importance of education; by dint of cramming all his lost schooling into a few months, he managed to gain entry into the University of California. He soon left, however, and in 1896 was caught up in the gold rush to the Klondike river in north-west Canada. He returned from there with no gold at all, but with the seed of a story which in 1903 became a huge bestseller- The Call of the Wild.
His very next novel was the Sea Wolf (1904), one of the most exciting sea stories ever written, and bassed as usual on Jack's own experiences as a sailor in the early 1890's. By 1913 he was the highest paid and most widely read writer in the world. He spent all his money, however, on his friends, on drinking, and especially on building himself a castle- like house, which was destroyed by fire before completion. Financial difficulties forced him to drive himself mercilessly, and to drink heavily, until he could stand no more. In 1916, at the age of forty, Jack London took his own life.
The Sea Wolf
This book comes from Jack London- the mind behind the classic- White Fang.
White Fang
A book that could have easily been a self- help guide on courage...
Part wolf, part dog, with the strength and courage of both in his blood, White Fang is an orphan cub in the frozen frontier of the Yukon. His is a world of enemies, animal and human. His inborn instincts and acquired ways teach him to hunt... to fight... to win! Nothing else matters. Men exploit and abuse him until one man teaches the noble animal to recognize his own greatest attribute- his loyalty. Only then can White Fang face the most dangerous challenge of all!