And Who says Life isn't inspired from books?

A new book, a new beginning, a fresh day.

I BELONG HERE!!!!!

Oh, Hi there, Professor McGonagall......yes, yes, Harry survives here too...

errrr....I'm having trouble concentrating on the book and dafbasdbfsamfbvsf

Saturday, December 22, 2012

The Snowman - Jo Nesbo

THE SNOWMAN

A Harry Hole novel

ISBN - 978-0-099-55174-4
FIRST PUBLISHED -  2010
PAGES - 550
GENRE - Crime/Thriller
BINDING - Paperback
SOURCE - my secret Santa :D

AUTHOR - Jo Nesbo

BEST-SELLERS - Headhunters, Phantom

SYNOPSIS - [From the back cover]

'SOON THE FIRST SNOW WILL COME.
 A young boy wakes to find his mother missing. Their house is empty but outside in the garden he sees his mother's favorite scarf - wrapped around the neck of a snowman.

AND THEN HE WILL APPEAR AGAIN.
As Harry Hole and his team begin their investigation, they discover that an alarming number of wives and mothers have gone missing over the years.

AND WHEN THE SNOW HAS GONE...
When a second woman disappears, it seems that Harry's worst suspicions are confirmed: for the first time in his career Harry finds himself confronted with a serial killer operating on his home turf.

...HE WILL HAVE TAKEN SOMEONE ELSE.'

Quotes - 

FL Speak -      

Friday, December 21, 2012

Drop Dead - Swati Kaushal


It took me quite some time to finish this time and I would like to blame it to the things I am dealing with currently. Too muchdrop-dead-a-niki-marwah-mystery-275x275-imaddj27vdvzc63h work pressure, travelling and too much running around. I am only getting an hour or two daily to read. Drop Dead by Swati Kaushal is a well thought story with interesting characterisation and series of events.

Swati Kaushal, the author has penned down two books previously named Piece of Cake & A Girl Like me. Drop Dead begins with the a death, death of Rakesh Mehta known as Rak who is the CEO of Indigo, a leading publishing house of India. Rak had an high held ego and people working at Indigo were not actually fond of him. His colleagues, Adit Bhatnagar, Meher, Rina, Pawan, Manav Luthra hated him for some or the other reason. Niki Marwah, the protagonist of the book is the superintendent of Police and with her efficient team of police officers having ACP Shankar Sahay, Inspector Pande and Gupta took charge of the case. Also, it was Niki Marwah's Daadi's 80th birthday and her family kept on bothering all the time because they thought she would be attending the celebrations as she is busy solving the case.

A lot of other characters get introduced as the story progresses. Each one of them having a significant role in the story. The only thing I disliked about the book is the length of it but I must also point out that I couldn't figure out who the murderer was till the very end of the book.

Swati Kaushal surely knows how to twist the story and keep it moving swiftly from one character to another and the same goes for the plot. Thumbs up for Swati Kaushal's Drop Dead and if you like reading women centric stories, then pick this book up.

Book Source : Publisher
Publisher : Hachette India
ISBN : 978-93-5009-449-5
Genre : Thriller, Fiction

The Sari Shop Widow by Shobhan Bantwal

Indian Mills and Boon anyone? Well, here is one! And what a grand book to lift my spirits.


The Sari Shop Widow is the quintessential romance, with desi twist in a foreign land. It is the story of anAnjali Kapadia, leading a widowed life since ten years. She is a designer, and runs a tasteful boutique in New Jersey. She is married to her work, but complications enter her life when her business faces troubled waters and her dreams stand jeopardized. Problems intensify further when Anjali's father calls over his elder brother -Jeevan - to save her troubled business, the only problem being his brother's reputation as a dictatorial, shrewd and ruthless businessman. The series of shocks doesn't end here. Jeevan brings with himself a suave, dapper, half-British business partner - Rishi Shah - in the form of a business consultant to resuscitate Anjali's drowning boat. However, Rishi Shah enters Anjali's life as something more than just a business consultant. He revives that corner of Anjali's heart which had been purposely locked away to avoid pains of getting hurt over love. She is aware of his intense gazes, but she does not trust him. If anything, she hates him for having come suddenly into her perfect little world, and turning it upside down. She hates the fact that Rishi Shah will take away from her the only thing she had built since her husband's death - her boutique, her work.

In this atmosphere of extreme hostility begins their story. She hates him, distrusts him, but is aware of the tremors which stir her body when he comes near her. Rishi, on his part is smitten with Anjali, but has a tough exterior - steel in his eyes - which keeps his tenderness hidden from her. To make matters worse, Rishi has a girlfriend back home, with whom he has shared half a decade of his life. How does the notion of romance even enter the picture then? Well, I was left wondering too. But there is a reason why over 1,00,000 copies of this book have been sold. The reason is author Shobhan Bantwal's extremely engaging and sensitively developed narrative. Take my word  for it, she is an author under the effect of whose pen, you as a reader are absolutely secure. By the end you realize that investing your heart and emotions in this story was absolutely worth it.

I have a weakness for love stories which have an element of forbidden in them - something which doggedly opposes the consummation of true love. The Sari Shop Widow is a rather modern, easy going story for very long, but at the point where emotions raise their head, I had to stop and catch my breath. Anjali and Rishi are characters who come alive with force. You feel for them at each twist and turn in the story. You take sides. You pray for them. You just hope they come together with fierceness. That is what an intense love story should do to you. That is precisely what this book does to you.

The Sari Shop Widow was a wonderful read through and through. I have no qualms, not one, with this lovely romantic tale, and this hasn't happened in a long time. There are sub plots, stories running in the background, a subtle mysterious touch, and absolutely no loose ends. The author maintains a cool control over her narrative. You flow, and gladly so. The descriptions in the book are not run-of-the-mill. At times, all romances seem alike in texture. However, this book might lend that slight touch of freshness that the romance genre so badly requires. A widow. A middle aged businessman. Their encounter in the most adverse circumstances. Inevitable romance. Order this book, prepare a cup of coffee when it arrives, tuck into your quilt - and savour some smouldering romance to beat the winters. Its a 4 star book for me!


Book Details - 
Author - Shobhan Bantwal
Book Source - Review Copy
Publisher - Fingerprint
Published - 2012
Genre - Romance
Price - ₹ 250
Pages - 361
Rating - 4/5

Giveaway for Blog Authors !!


Rule#1 . As mentioned in the subject , You should be an author on the blog
Rule#2. You must have written a review in year 2012 on this blog.

 So what you have to do further ?

 1. Paste the link for the review you enjoyed writing.
 2. One review you liked to read ( of course it should be by some other author on blog).

That's it.

 The winner would be announced on Jan 1st.

 Oh, giveaway books ??
 Pick any book from below :




And Then There Were None - Agatha Christie
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo - Stieg Larsson
Norwegian Wood - Haruki Murakami
Tai-Pan - James Clavell
City of Bones - Cassandra Clare
Sister - Rosamund Lupton
Assassin's Creed | Renaissance - Oliver Bowden
The Mark - Jen Nadol
The Hades Factor - Robert Ludlum and Gayle Lynds
Finger Lickin' Fifteen - Janet Evanovich
The Rivered Earth - Vickram Seth
Shock Point - April Henry
Too Asian, not Asian enough - edited by Kavita Bhanat
Cheaper by the Dozen - Frank B. Gilbreth, Jr. and Ernestine Gilbreth Carey
We Were Here - Matt De La Pena
A is for Alibi - Sue Grafton
The Sly Company of People who Care - Rahul Bhattacharya
Ilustrado - Miguel Syjuco



Best of Luck everyone and Merry Christmas!

Who says the admins do not love you ;)

Once Upon A Time, Online: Interviewing Rishi Vohra


It's not everyday that one gets to interview such a talented, accomplished and charming author- Mr. Vohra sure knows how to put the good in your morning! I recently read his debut novel 'Once Upon the Tracks of Mumbai' and I am thrilled that I got an opportunity to interview him online. 

Rishi Vohra recently relocated back to Mumbai after completing a Green MBA from San Francisco State University and a Masters Diploma in Environmental Law (World Wildlife Fund – New Delhi), prior to which he had a successful career in the Indian Entertainment Industry. He has worked as an Assistant Director with Filmmakers Sohail Khan and Shimit Amin, and independently directed music videos, television shows, live stage shows and film award events.  

His other academic qualifications include a B.S. degree in Finance with a minor in Multi-Ethnic Film/Theatre from Arizona State University and an Associate of Arts (AA) degree in Film from Scottsdale Community College. After featuring as a guest columnist for various newspapers in India, he currently writes for delWine and is a Certified Specialist of Wine (CSW). 





This is not a typical love story. What was the inspiration behind this unusual book? Which incidents that you narrated were taken from real life?

Arpita, all incidents and characters are fictional. I got the idea of Babloo’s character from an older friend of mine who had similar problems.  Once I created Babloo’s character, I was keen on giving him a story, exploring his struggle, pain, and triumphs, and walking with him on his solitary journey, the sole purpose of which was to find normalcy and an identity for himself in the fact-paced life of Mumbai.

The love story is just a part of the book though the book cover may convey otherwise. It is about a young man defined more by his mental disorders than the person he is. So everything he sets out to do proves more difficult for him than ‘normal’ people which, includes professing his love. 

The novel has a quite a few underlying themes if you read between the lines. What would you say is the most important message that the book sends to the reader?

This book isn’t intended to deliver a clear-cut message to the reader. It is just meant to be a fast-read, and another source of entertainment to people. But for those who read between the lines, the message is that one has to go through an immense amount of struggle and pain to find happiness.

What other title would you have picked for the book if not this one?

I don’t know – didn’t really think of another one. I was a guest on a radio show a few weeks back – Planet Radio City 91.1 FM – with VJs Salil and Archana.  Salil had read the book and in the beginning of the show, he accidentally kept referring to the book as ‘Love on the Tracks of Mumbai.’  Maybe that could be one! :)

Hahaha...that sounds interesting! What led to the creation of the ‘Rail Man’? 

Well Arpita, when I sat down to write, I hadn't created a concrete story at the onset. I led the story unfold with each page. I reached a point where Babloo’s frustrations and hopelessness needed an avenue to be vented. That’s when I brought Rail Man in. So I knew that there was going to be a character called Rail Man in the story, but wasn't sure when I would bring him in.

Also, Rail Man is symbolic of what every Indian aspires to be. We all are intrinsically unhappy with the problems and injustice happening around us, but are unable or unwilling to do anything about them.  There is a Rail Man, a hero, in all of us.  Maybe, I created Rail Man because like everyone else, I aspire to be such a person.

Vandana comes across as an independent and ambitious girl, but there are times when she decides to give in to her 'Fate'. Would you say it shows a weakness of character or is it implied that sometimes it is more wise to adapt to one's circumstances? 

It depends, Arpita, on the circumstances that a person is in or has grown up in. Vandana is born into a lower middle-class Railway family.  Her family has certain beliefs about the way a girl should be sheltered, how much she should study, with whom and when she would get married, among other things. Though Vandana has a progressive mindset owing to her Mumbai education and her external influences, at the end of the day she is bound to a certain tradition. There are many people in India like that. Some people don’t have choices while others get fed up of fighting, and resign themselves to their fate.

So to answer your question Arpita, it’s not a weakness of character but more of a conditioning of it. 

Which character would you call your favourite and who do you actually relate to?

I relate to Babloo. And I have received a lot of mail where readers have told me that they relate to him as well.  He is a very diverse character, and we all think like him but never show it because society has conditioned us into behaving in a certain way. But Babloo, because of his mental problems, has no filtration process and says and acts in accordance with what he feels. 

With regard to my favourite character, they all are.  I created each and every one of them and they lived in my mind for a long time. Even though I moved on to another book, I can’t shake these characters off just yet. Whenever I go to Bandra Station and see the actual locations used in the book, I feel that there’s a Babloo, Vandana, Sikander, Mandeep Singh, etc. somewhere around watching me. It’s kind of eerie.:)

It sure sounds like it! Mandeep was one of my most favorite characters. Was there an alternate ending to the story?

No there wasn’t, Arpita. JAICO had asked me to explore some alternate endings, which I did. But I wanted to keep the 'masala' touch to it. The publisher read the two alternate endings I had sent them and after internal discussions, decided to stick with my original. I had planned to keep an open-ended conclusion for a sequel. But I think this story is best in its present form with a complete ending.

Would you hesitate to write about sensitive issues that might lead to controversy?

Never!  That’s the fantastic part about writing a book.  You can say and show what you want. People have the option to read the blurb, and decide whether they would want to read the book. Sensitive issues should be explored and written about, but in a way that no one feels personally offended.

How do you manage to balance the time you give to writing, work and leisure?

I love writing to the point that it feels like a leisure activity.  If I had a choice to write or to go out with friends, I would rather write.  It has made me an introvert of sorts, but it also brings me joy.  So for me, it’s just work and leisure like anyone else.

Hey, I too would choose to sit home and write, rather than go out with friends! Well, most of the time anyway. :P How did publishers- and family- react to your decision to pursue writing? 

My family didn’t know I was writing the book, till it was completed. And they didn’t know that I was pushing it for publication till I signed with a publishing company.

Wow! That must have been some surprise! Which author would you say you really look up to?

S. Hussain Zaidi.  I have never met him.  I admire his work.

What are your top five favourite novels that you would recommend to all bookworms?

Catcher in the Rye by JD Salinger, 

Dongri to Dubai : Six Decades of the Mumbai Mafia by S. Hussain Zaidi, 


A Fine Balance by Rohinton Mistry, 


Sounds of Silence by Nan Umrigar, 


and My Way: The Way of the White Clouds by Osho.

Which is the one literary character you'd love to be like?

Ian Fleming’s James Bond!

I love that answer! :D Which anti-hero would you say you admire, and why?

None.  I admire only heroes! :)

Which story from a book would you like to live, as the protagonist or any other significant character?

Good question, Arpita.  There was a character called Sartaj Singh in Vikram Chandra’s Sacred Games.  The character is very unique in that he is dynamic, fearless, and has many layers to him. I wish that Vikram brings him back in one of his forthcoming novels.

Thank you! Final question- what advice would you give to aspiring writers who go through ‘Writer’s Block’?

Sit down and write/type your thoughts - whatever is going on in your head.  It will free your mind and enable you to quickly and surely overcome writer’s block!  The only way to overcome writer’s block is by writing! :) 

Well said, Rishi! :)


So that was how my conversation went with the debonair author. Hope you enjoyed reading the post! Do check out his novel 'Once Upon the Tracks of Mumbai'. Looking at how things are going in the Capital, this book stands out for its sensitivity to the plight of women, among other things. Have a wonderful and safe day, people! 


Thursday, December 20, 2012

Cloud Atlas - David Mitchell


CLOUD ATLAS

ISBN - 9781444730876
FIRST PUBLISHED - 2004
PAGES - 529
GENRE - Literary Fiction
BINDING -Paperback
SOURCE - *from the own damned pocket*

AUTHOR - David Mitchell

BEST-SELLERS - Ghostwritten, Number9dream

SYNOPSIS - [From the back cover]

Six interlocking lives - one amazing adventure. In a narrative that circles the globe and reaches from the 19th century to a post-apocalyptic future, David Mitchell erases the boundaries of time, genre and language to offer an enthralling vision of humanity's will to power, and where it will lead us.

QUOTES - 

“Our lives are not our own. We are bound to others, past and present, and by each crime and every kindness, we birth our future.”  

“Power, time, gravity, love. The forces that really kick ass are all invisible.” 


 “All revolutions are the sheerest fantasy until they happen; then they become historical inevitabilities."

“I believe there is another world waiting for us. A better world. And i'll be waiting for you there"

 “Travel far enough, you meet yourself.”

 “We looked at each other for the last time; nothing is as eloquent as nothing.”

FL Speak - What on earth did I just read???

It starts in 1850's, then jumps to 1930's, another jump to 1990's, then its somewhere in the 21st century, move to the post apocalyptic future now and then finally to post-post apocalyptic future?? And its all connected!

The book is written in such a way that it will keep you hanging. Most endings are abrupt. Especially when you least expect them. The author does manage to tie them off and the way he does it leaves you speechless. There are 6 principal characters and its their story spanning centuries. So the story moves from 1-2 and then 2-3-4-5-6 and from there it comes back 6-5-4-3-2-1. Confused? Allow me to be your savior without going into the details.

The first story is set in 1850's. Its the story of Adam Erwing. He's in one of the islands of Hawaii while the ship he's travelling with is in repairs. His ship starts sailing soon and he makes a new friend among one of the tribes of Hawaii. And just like that, the story ends. Infact, the story ends in midway of a sentence. I turn the page only to find it blank. You can imagine my consternation and I spared no amount of abuses at the publishers who managed to fuck it up. The next story is of a penniless musician Robert Frobisher set n 1930's. He sends a series of letters to a friend of his, describing his life living under the tutelage of a musical maestro. There he discovers the half written journal of Adam Erwing and he sends it to his pen-pal to find the rest.

The third and the fourth character makes an entrance with a new story. [And the abuses rain again] His name is Rufus Sixsmith and he is the above mentioned letter pal of Robert Frobisher. It is now 1990's (?) and he meets Luisa Rey, a journalist. She's snooping around a corporation of an unsafe nuclear powerplant where Sixsmith works. A few tens of pages later. Bam! New Story. Its now the 21st century and Timothy Cavendish is a publisher who manages to get himself locked up in elderly home. His only companion, a novel written by Luisa Rey.

Its now somewhere in the future and earth is unsafe to live. Sonmi~45I is a clone. A clone who works in an eatery. Their only duty is to serve. They look human, have human parts but feed on chemicals. Soon Sonmi~45I ascends. Here, Ascends means they start to have feelings, they think on their own. Soon the pot boils and before we know it [yes you guessed it], end of it.

This is the final tale. Its post apocalyptic future and human kind has almost ceased to exist. A few pockets of barbaric/medieval civilization remain. Zachery is a young Valleys man who herds goats for his family. The Valleys man pray to their Sonmi. Yes, the same Somni. His life takes a turn for the worst when a smarter group of powerful people arrive at his village with a nuclear ship.

 And from here onwards, David Mitchell ties the book up in a fantastic way. We move back to Sonmi to learn what happened, then further back to Cavendish, then Luisa, Robert and finally to Me. Erwing. You remember me crying out for the missing pages from chapter 1. Well, its all here in the end. Ladies and Gentleman, it has been a thrilling read. I've simply no words.

I've just given a gist of each character. They have their own stories and its marvellous. Sonmi and Robert are by far my favorites. Wait, i loved Luisa too. And then there's this thing that chills me to the bone. Robert, Luisa, Sonmi and Meronym [a character in the chapter with Zachery], all have the same scar at exactly the same place. What on bleddy earth did that mean????

And the language! Oh-my-f-GAWD! Remember the 1st chapter in 1830's. The language was such that I had to take up a dictionary with me. It was high, upper class English that was spoken in those times. Jump to next chapter and the English changes. To a reader, its like reading and watching centuries pass by. The Zachary (post apocalpytic future) chapter's English made me cry. It was barbaric, it was unrefined. It was exactly that, that befitted that time. I didn't want to read and I didn't want the book to end. So I took my sweet time, made noodles, smoked and came back to this glorious narrative.

This is a beautiful, marvellous tale. Reading David Mitchell has been a pleasure. An exhausting, exhillarating pleasure. That Brit is a genius. If you haven't watched the movie, read the book first. As for me, am off to watch that movie.

My rating - 4.8/5 stars

PRICE - INR 350/-

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Shutter Island- Dennis Lehane


“She was afraid of all that and so much more, but what terrified her most was inside of her, an insect of unnatural intelligence who’d been living in her brain her entire life, playing with it, clicking across it, wrenching loose its cables on a whim.” 



'The year is 1954. U.S. Marshal Teddy Daniels and his new partner, Chuck Aule, have come to Shutter Island, home of Ashecliffe Hospital for the Criminally Insane, to investigate the disappearance of a patient. Multiple murderess Rachel Solando is loose somewhere on this remote and barren island, despite having been kept in a locked cell under constant surveillance. As a killer hurricane bears relentlessly down on them, a strange case takes on even darker, more sinister shades- with hints of radical experimentation, horrifying surgeries, and lethal counter-moves made in the cause of a covert shadow war. No one is going to escape Shutter Island unscathed, because nothing at Ashecliffe Hospital is what it seems. But then neither is Teddy Daniels.' 

Shutter Island was 1st published in 2003.

Genre: Psychological Thriller

Number of Pages: 369

ISBN: 978-0-380-73186-2

Price: Rs. 275/- (Flipkart)

I was sent this book by the ALOP team, via Homeshop 18.

About the author: A native of Dorchester, Massachusetts, Dennis Lehane lives in the Boston area. His book 'A Drink Before the War' won the Shamus Award for Best First Novel. 


                                                 

              
He is the author of New York Times bestseller Mystic River, which was made into a film in 2003, directed by Clint Eastwood; it starred Sean PennTim Robbins, and Kevin Bacon. The novel itself was a finalist for the PEN/Winship Award and won the Anthony Award and the Barry Award for Best Novel, the Massachusetts Book Award in Fiction, and France's Prix Mystère de la Critique. 

Quotes from Shutter Island:

“This world can only give me reminders of what I don't have, can never have, didn't have for long enough.” 

 “I loved this woman the way you love ... well, nothing," he said, a note of surprise in his voice. "You can’t compare that kind of love to anything, can you? It’s its own unique gift.” 

“The brain controls pain. It controls fear. Sleep. Empathy. Hunger. Everything we associate with the heart or the soul or the nervous system is actually controlled by the brain. Everything. What if you could control it?” 

Arpita Speaks:

The thin line between dreams and reality becomes negligible, when you can barely tell them apart. They say depression is so easy to fall into. Madness is even more alluring.

How can you be sure that what you are seeing is real? Everyone has their own version of the truth, depending upon what they choose to believe in. And the mind can play funny games.  

If you let it happen, this book can make you question your own notion of truth and reality. This is one of those stories that are so awe-inspiring that no matter how well you try to express yourself, you’ll always fall short of words.

The novel is set in a span of four days, each more sinister and haunting than the last. The dreams, the action, the setting- each will leave your gut clenching with dread. The chilling images can get stuck to your eyelids like a nightmare that would not go away.

I finished this book in a very short period of time and it’s been on my mind for days. I knew the truth about the protagonist before I read the book- but the labyrinthine plot and mind-boggling twists left me thoroughly perplexed towards the end, and completely unsure about what to believe. If you ask me, that’s what sets an author apart: his ability to rope you in so well that you’ll enjoy reading the book even if you know the story.

If it’s supernatural, you can still convince yourself it’s not real and probably won’t ever happen. But science can scare you in a way nothing else can. I suggest you read this book only if you can handle it

Rating: 5/5