
I finished reading Visiting Moon by my professor Susan Viswanathan. I am currently studying Sociology at Jawaharlal Nehru Uinversity and Vishwanathan teaches us Classical Thinkers. Visiting Moon is a lovely journey of a divorced woman writer who lives with her two boys, yet leads an unsettled life. I also plan to read Antonio Gramsci's The Prison Notebooks which I recently bought as he influences modern thinking and philosophy a great deal.
Parul
I got hold of The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand. My friends recommended it to me. It?s turning out to be a very slow and painful read but I am hoping that it'll turn out better. I am also an Agatha Christie fan and so I read them simultaneously.
Disha Bhattacharjee
I am currently doing a course in English Journalism from IIMC. So I like to read non-fiction as well, just to keep up to date. I am reading Jack Welch's autobiography Straight From The Gut. Welch is the CEO of GE and this is the story of his construction of the empire. I am also reading Eric Segal's romance Doctors. I also plan to read Shantaram as I have heard it to be an interesting read.
Saurabh Sati
I am reading The World is Flat: A Brief History of the 21st Century by Thomas L. Friedman, which opens up new avenues for understanding globalization. It has helped me enormously as I am working in a media related field. I am about to finish the last installment of the Potter series - Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince.
Rupanjali Lahiri, Delhi University
I am reading The Kite Runner by Khalid Hosseini. It's an unusual and extraordinary story of growing up in Afghanistan - a country beset by violence and terrorism. Also it is the debut novel of Hosseini. I also plan to read Inheritance of Loss, which won the Booker Prize recently.
Sumit Ray, Delhi University
I am an avid reader and an Agatha Christie fan. Currently, I am engrossed in reading The Golem's Eye by Jonathan Stroud, who is a wonderful author of fantasy and mythology books. This book is the second installment in the Bartimaeus Trilogy and I plan to complete them all.
Jaya Mitra, Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), Delhi
I have just finished reading The Strangers of the Mist by Sanjay Hazarika. I am from Assam and reading Hazarika makes me better understand the strained conditions and relations of the seven North-East states among themselves and the centre. Hazarika is a well-informed journalist and provides a perceptive analysis the emergence and growth of various terrorist groups working in the seven states.
Raktim Sharma, student
I have finished reading Two Lives by Vikram Seth (He's my favourite!) and am highly impressed by his other works too. I have also finished reading Somerset Maughm's Of Human Bondage and Hemingway's For Whom The Bell Tolls. I plan to read Shantaram next as I have heard a lot about it.
Soumya Gupta, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Delhi |
Can writers, poets and artists do anything to help curb the scourge of terrorism that is killing innocents all over the world, be it Mumbai, Madrid or London? Is a terrorist a wounded individual out to wreak revenge on an unjust system or simply a cold-blooded killer masquer-ading as a martyr?
Send your comments to editor@indiawrites.org
Winners
of the best 5 entries get one book written by Dan Brown. |
There are many kinds and even genres of friendship, but there is something
uniquely fulfilling about the camaraderie inspired by love of books
and learning. Call it platonic love or a secret cult of lovers-readers.
If you wish to join the Book Brotherhood (or sisterhood, if you like) and
initiate friendships that will stimulate your muse, write to us about your
preferences and find a kindred soul to revisit pleasures of T.S. Eliot’s
urbane wit, Vikram Seth’s gift for writing sonnets, the sheer rapture
of reading Ghalib, delicious distraction of reading dishy airport novels…
Let go of self-censorship and discuss anything under the sun – the
pious fable and the dirty story share in total literary glory… |
It’s a secret vice of bibliophiles – lazily browsing through
yellowing pages of second-hand books for hours on end in quiet anticipation
that you will hit a masterpiece, and that too at throwaway prices. Imagine
getting the first edition of Keats’ Poems or Byron’s Letters
at a price less than what a hamburger and coke costs…
In this column, readers-seekers are invited to share their agonies and
ecstasies at these suburbs of the intellectual mart. They can also put up
their books for sale or make an exchange offer…
Don’t give books that you have wearied of to raddiwalla (junk dealer); put it up
for display here.
For one man’s ex can easily ignite another man’s passion and
be his soul mate!
Share your discoveries with editor@indiawrites.org
|
After Percy Bysshe Shelley died, his wife had his heart preserved. She wrapped it in silk and carried it with her wherever she went.
Samuel Johnson wrote The History of Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia (1759) during the evenings in just one week to pay for his mother’s funeral expense. |
Canto
A subdivision of an epic poem.
Each of the three books of Dante Alighieri's "Divine Comedy" is divided into cantos. For example, in each of the cantos of "The Inferno," Dante meets the souls of people who were once alive and who have been condemned to punishment for sin. Return to Menu
Carpe Diem
A Latin phrase which translated means "Sieze (Catch) the day," meaning "Make the most of today."
The phrase originated as the title of a poem by the RomanHorace (65 B.C.E.-8B.C.E.) and caught on as a theme with such English poets as Robert Herrick and Andrew Marvell.
Consider these lines from Herrick's "To the Virgins, to Make Much of Time":
Gather ye rose-buds
while ye may,
Old Time is still a-flying:
And this same flower that smiles
today,
To-morrow will be dying. |
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Nuclear deal and politics of multipolar world
By K. Subrahmanyam
US President George W. Bush reportedly intends to write individually to heads of governments of 44 other member nations of the Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG), urging that India be given a clean waiver from the present NSG guidelines which do not permit nuclear commerce with any non-signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) which has not placed all its nuclear facilities under the full scope safeguards of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA).
The US administration has also prepared a draft waiver resolution acceptable to India and has forwarded it to Germany, the current chair of the NSG. The issue will be considered by that body on Aug 21-22.
These actions of the US have been sought to be interpreted by some conspiracy theorists as indicative of US commercial interest in the Indian nuclear industry and as a means of seducing India into a subordinate strategic partnership to the US in Asia, with particular intent to promote military containment of China and isolation of Iran. Such conspiracy theorists are not interested in paying attention to India and China taking a common stand vis-a-vis the US and the European Union on the agricultural issue in the World Trade Organisation (WTO) negotiations. Nor do they want to pay attention to the slight thawing of relations between the US and Iran. Nor can they explain why Russia and France, two of the strongest protagonists of a multipolar system, also happen to be the most fervent supporters of the India-US nuclear deal and exceptionalisation of India from the NSG guidelines.
Most of the above misperceptions arise out of inadequate understanding of today's multipolar world and India's place in it. When the Cold War ended, the European countries, Japan and China did not need the US security protection against a superpower adversary -- the Soviet Union. In the last 16 years the European Union has emerged as the pre-eminent economic entity in the international system with the US slipping into the second place. Russia, after a period of decline during the Yeltsin years, has re-emerged as a major power and a major supplier of energy for Europe, Japan and China.
All the major powers, including Russia, are members of G-8, the elite club of the world's most industrialised nations which attempt to shape macro economic policies of the world. Brazil, India and China are invited to this group as fastest growing economies which are likely to influence global economic and trade developments in the near future. China is already doing so. In this world of balance of power, there is both cooperation and competition among all major powers.
In the multipolar world the major powers are interested in ensuring the faster development of the new and aspiring entrants to ensure that no single power will attempt to dominate the system disproportionately. The faster the expansion of the global economic pie, the smaller the share of the US economy in it. Similarly, the faster the growth of India, South Korea, Vietnam and Indonesia, the better countervailing balance against China in Asia and the world. The multipolar international system today is therefore not unfavourable to India's growth and progress as it was not to China's growth in the 1980s and 90s. But India is the only major power which is subjected to technology denial arising out of the technology ban imposed by the London Suppliers Club, now expanded and known as NSG.
Against this background, India is one of the four countries which are outside the NPT, the other three being Israel, Pakistan and North Korea. Other 188 countries are members of the NPT. After conducting a nuclear test, North Korea has agreed to dismantle its nuclear arsenal and rejoin the NPT of which it was earlier a member. Israel has been in possession of its arsenal even before the NPT was drafted and has no interest in civil nuclear commerce. That leaves only India and Pakistan outside the NPT and international nuclear commerce.
India has advanced nuclear technology, designed its own reactors, is developing fast breeder reactors, doing research on the conversion of thorium into U-233 to be used as fuel in future reactors and is a member of the international research team for thermo nuclear energy research. Though the London Suppliers Club, the predecessor of NSG, was set up as a response to the 1974 Indian nuclear test, 34 years have passed since then with India having a spotless record on nuclear proliferation.
The same cannot be said of Pakistan. It is not a power with advanced nuclear technology, holds a record in nuclear proliferation and refuses to allow access for the IAEA to A. Q. Khan, the arch proliferator. Therefore, as President George Bush told General Pervez Musharraf before the international TV cameras in March 2006, the two nations (India and Pakistan) are different, have different histories and different needs.
Giving India the waiver and bringing it into the non-proliferation regime and acknowledging its nuclear arsenal will be a gain for the international nuclear nonproliferation regime and nuclear commerce and will make India a stakeholder in the regime. Therefore, the very founders of the London Suppliers Club (the NSG) - the US, Russia, the UK, France, Germany, Japan and Canada - are in favour of the waiver and removing the impediments of technology denial from India's growth. This explains the wide support to this move. The smaller powers which have reservations on the waiver are mostly focused on NPT as a dogma and are likely to be persuaded to take a broader geo-strategic view.
The move of US House International Relations Committee chairman Howard Berman to highlight the Hyde Act provisions on any future testing by India will be countered by the US administration itself. The discretion to impose sanctions on a country conducting a nuclear test is with the US president under the US Atomic Energy Act of 1954. The Hyde Act seeks to circumscribe this power and this will not be accepted by any US president. Nor can that be a conditionality for NSG since that would subordinate the US president's decisions to that of an international body, an issue on which the Americans are very sensitive. Therefore, that issue will be settled in the US itself.
The time has come for India to take full advantage of the present international strategic situation and make full use of multipolarity for its own faster growth.
Comments
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I can't go on, says Beckett's Unnamable. I will go on. A writer's injuries are his strengths, and from his wounds will flow his sweetest, most startling dreams.
-- Salman Rushdie in February 1999: Ten Years of the Fatwa
And Proust, too, killing himself to write his book comes close to the concept of dharma when, echoing Balzac, he says that in the end it's less the desire for fame than 'the habit of laboriousness' that takes a writer to the end of a work. But dharma, as this ideal of truth to oneself, or living out the truth in oneself, can also be used to reconcile men to servitude and make them find in paralyzing obedience the highest spiritual good. 'And do thy duty, even if it be humble,' says the Aryan Gita,
'rather than another's, even it be great. To die on one's duty is life: to live in another' death.
V.S. Naipaul in India: A Wounded Civilisation
My discovery over the years is that the mother tongues have so much in them, so much that is alive, and are much more pervasive, in all strata of society, in all ages from children to the very old, men and women, literate and non-literate. What holds them together? It's not Sanskrit. It's these mother tongues. I think I went into linguistics because of that. That spoken languages had to be very, very important. It was important in my youth to have discovered this.
-- A.K. Ramanujan in an interview
Writing is a concentrated form of thinking. I don't know what I think about certain subjects, even today, until I sit down and try to write about them. Maybe I wanted to find more rigorous ways of thinking. We are talking now about the earliest writing I did and about the power of language to counteract the wallow of late adolescence, to define things, define muddled expression in economical ways. Let's not forget that writing is convenient. It requires the simplest tools. A young writer sees that with words and sentences on a piece of paper that costs less than a penny he can place himself more clearly in the world. Words on a page, that's all it takes to help him separate himself from the forces around him, streets and people and pressures and feelings. He learns to think about these things, to ride his own sentences into new perceptions.
-- Don DeLillo
Always dream and shoot higher than you know you can do. Don’t bother just to be better than your contemporaries or predecessors. Try to be better than yourself. An artist is a creature driven by daemons. He doesn’t know why they chose him and he is usually too busy to wonder why. He is completely amoral in that he will rob, borrow, beg, or steal from anybody and everybody to get the work done.
-- William Faulkner
I am trembling with cold
I want to feel nothing!
But the sky dances with gold.
It orders me to sing.
--
Osip Mandelstam
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The Top 10:
Fiction
- The Inheritance of Loss
Kiran Desai
Penguin Books
- The Innocent Man
John Grisham
Arrow Books
- The Kite Runner
Khaled Hosseini
Penguin
- Like the Flowing River
Paulo Coelho
Random House
- Shantaram
Gregory David Roberts
ABACUS
- Passion India
Javier Moro
Full Circle
- The Road
Cormac McCarthy
Picador
- The Afghan
Frederick Forsyth
Random House
- Ines of My Soul
Isabel Allende
Fourth Estate
- Dear John
Nicholas Sparks
Sphere
Top 10: Non-Fiction
- The Last Mughal: The Fall of a Dynasty, Delhi 1857
William Dalrymple
Penguin Viking
- In Spite of the Gods: The Strange Rise of Modern India
Edward Luce
Little Brown
- Mohandas: A True Story of a Man, his People and an Empire
Rajmohan Gandhi
Penguin-Viking
- Kama Sutra: The Art of Making Love to a Woman
Pavan K. Varma
Roli Books
- Life Lessons from the Monk Who Sold His Ferrari
Robin S. Sharma
Jaico
- In the Name of Honour
Mukhtar Mai
A Virago Original
- Maximum City: Bombay Lost and Found
Suketu Mehta
Penguin
- Trees of Delhi
Author: Pradip Krishen
Delhi Tourism
- The Audacity of Hope: Thoughts on Reclaiming The American Dream
Barack Obama
Crown
- Making Globalization Work: The Next Steps to Global Justice
Joseph Stiglitz
Penguin Allen Lane
(IndiaWrites Bestsellers List is based on inputs from select bookshops in India & an informal survey of readers’ preferences.) |
It may sound clichéd that reading is an art, but the fact is that
there aren’t many passionate and attentive readers around. Of course, there will always be distracted souls turning
to pulp fiction or some odd forgotten classic to escape from boredom and
the killing sameness that pervades modern life.
Read it here... |
Booker Prize winning Indian author Arundhati Roy has been nominated for
the prestigious Spanish Prince of Asturias Prize for 2006.
The award carries a cash prize of 50,000 Euros and a sculpture by Catalan
artist, Joan Miro.
A foundation named after Spain's Crown Prince Felipe chooses the winners
in different fields such as communications and humanities, social sciences,
international cooperation, scientific investigation, arts, harmony and sports.
Big Prize for 'The Master'
Irish author Colm Toibin's ‘The Master won the world’s richest literary award
Utterly Monkey bags the Trask Award
After Zadie Smith's third fictional novel 'On Beauty' won the Orange Prize for Fiction
Big Prize for 'The Master'
Irish author Colm Toibin's ‘The Master won the world’s richest literary award - the 68,000-pounds
Shakespeare the all-time winner!
'1599-A Year in the life of William Shakespeare' beat other highly prestigious covers to win the Samuel Johnson non-fiction prize.
MORE NEWS |
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