Saturday, July 30, 2011

Book Review: The Long Road by Dr. Vivek Banerjee





The Long Road: Journey is the Destination
By Dr. Vivek Banerjee
Cedar Books
Link on FlipKart

Four days back I started reading The Long Road, Dr. Vivek Banerjee’s debut novel. And now that I ended it, I have also ended up ordering three more copies of this book as a gift to my friends. I have rarely done this for any other book, and my reasons for this special treatment are as follows.
The Long Road is the story of young doctors pursuing Post Graduate in medical sciences. It’s the love story of Rahul and Sarika which goes through many challenging times and phases. It’s also a parallel story of Dr. Hina, a girl from a very different background who goes on to achieve something which not many from her circumstances could; yet almost gets defeated against her personal challenges. The story also captures Ranjiv’s and Sagarika’s life stories – each equally fascinating and full of life than any others. On the surface it may look like a maze of characters, but this is where the author’s real talent is proven and this is what makes this book equal to four books. Each character has been given enough thought to develop and by the end of the book we forget which one of them was the prime one. The Long Road takes readers on a virtual long road passing through the lives of each character; each unique and complete in itself.
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The Long Road’s characters are so real that we connect with them instantly. We feel a personal connection with each character as the story moves. We feel an anger when Sarika dumps Rahul on a rather trivial issue, a sorrow when Rahul meets with an accident, butterflies in our stomach when Rahul gets close to Rita, shock when Sagarika discovers unexpected about her husband, and a great relief at the end. Often we get a feel as if things are happening in front of our eyes – this is where the first time author has proven his prowess. The environment of a hospital and the characterization of the scheme are very appropriate. For example, when young lady doctor Hina is on her first duty, a nurse who is 15 years old in the hospital gives her a ‘motherly smile’ with empathy. The author has been highly successful in weaving sense and sensibility in even the minutest details. The description of environment around the characters is appropriate – e.g. the visual description of the hospital main gate when Sarika goes to join her college for the first day. The novel also has a lot of dramatic moments, for example the day when terrorists attacked Mumbai. When I started reading this portion I felt that it would be too bold and adventurous to include as part of a love story, but ended in admiration. Situations are sensible and complementary to make the most of the things on hand.
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If I have to give suggestions to the debut novelist, I felt the second half of the book had been slightly hurried. Some very critical events happened in the second half and slowing down the pace a bit at those places would have been better. Also, I felt the front cover was not exactly bringing up the idea of ‘The Long Road’ properly, though it indicated a love story under the covers. The length of the book was very perfect and never did the reader get to feel heavy – author has been a good strategist on this front.
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When my wife read The Long Road, she commented that it was like Chetan Bhagat’s (whose fan she is). But I found The Long Road much more sensible, less controversial, and more appealing to heart than attempts to gain some easy popularity which young and restless new Indian authors have tried too often. I am sure Dr. Banerjee has added to the list of quality read from new Indian writers in English.
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I have not read many books making the rather neglected life stories of doctors in the medical profession as their theme. I thank Dr. Vivek Banerjee for bringing out some real challenges in their lives, something which perhaps only a doctor like him could do. I have myself been able to get a peek into their lives and their hardships – the challenges of their profession taking much toll on their personal lives and also of their close ones. I really congratulate Dr. Banerjee for this book – it was long needed and is highly appreciated.
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It has been a delight to read The Long Road. The characters from his book will always remain personal to me, and a sequel of the same may not be a bad idea. I would eagerly wait for the author’s next book.
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- Rahul
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.P.S.: Except this post, Book Reviews on this blog have been pushed to 10 years back on the Calender, which you can browse through from the right hand side menu. These days I am reading more than I write, or truer, writing less than I read, and I didn’t want this blog to become my Book Review Blog, which is http://rahulreads.wordpress.com

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Saturday, July 23, 2011

Reaching out to Goonj

I had written before on my blog, about how I got an idea of making a social change by helping my colleagues in my office to donate old clothes and other items to the poor and needy (through an NGO). I started collecting material from colleagues about a month back. People used to call me up, used to bring old clothes and other materials in poly-bags and I would meet them to collect. At times they even dropped the materials at my home, when the material was heavy. I could meet them during lunch, or after the office hours before going home. The collection system worked very well but I had not imagined that it will gain so much popularity. Within a month I collected so much material that the space in my flat started looking stuffed. By that time I had also realized that Goonj’s warehouse (the NGO through which I had planned to help donate) was too far away in a very different portion of the city. Two colleagues had initially expressed interests to help me by carrying materials in their cars, but later on we were finding issues with their availability (also because the place to go was about 30km from our place). But at last, Supriti and her husband obliged me by giving a helping hand.
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So one Saturday, she and her husband came with their car and we went to the NGO’s warehouse. She had already collected a lot of material from her neighbors also, and together we had a huge amount – perhaps 200 kgs or so. Goonj’s warehouse was near Wagheshwari Temple, and even Chokhi Dhani was not far away. It was a pleasant drive to reach there. But more pleasant was what we saw after reaching there. It was their warehouse cum processing center. The center’s in-charge told us that if the donated clothes were in good shape they donated those to the poor as-it-is. But in case of torn clothes (especially cotton or denim), they make a lot of useful items like bags, wallets, etc from the clothes. Even a cotton thread doesn’t go waste if they collect it, as we saw that they were creating very good doormats from those waste clothes. We also saw the bags and wallets they had made and everything looked very new and fresh. We saw about 20 rural women working there in their center. We came to know that at times they also ran campaigns or stalls and sell the items made by the women. The money goes back to the poor, and the women are also employed in a way. I found their model very innovative and worth emulating by others. The person from the NGO gave me a receipt, which was actually printed on one side of a used-paper. Great to know that they actually practice what they preach.
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<< I have pictures of the bags they had prepared. I would load those here in some time. >> You can also check a similar observation here [Link] The following picture taken from www.goonj.org shows the women making school bags out of old collected clothes:
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In the events like a flood, earthquake or tsunami, Goonj helps the affected regions with supplies of clothes and other items. The NGO is also connected with a lot of other allied NGOs for many activities.
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I wish to continue the collection drive and help others help the poor. And then I have some of my own other plans to help the poor and needy, which I look forward to starting someday.
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- Rahul

Forbes list of World’s Most Innovative Companies


Forbes has brought out a list of World’s Most Innovative Companies, ranking them by a matric called Innovation Premium: 
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Salesforce.com is ranked as world’s most innovative company. Amazon.com is at #2, confirming that technology companies will remain in the most innovative lot as a practice. Some favorites appear like this: #5 Apple, #7 Google. We have good representation from the ERP players also: SAP is at #63, Oracle at #77, Microsoft at #86, (Well, Salesforce is at #1, as I started with). 
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We have Intuitive Surgical as world’s #3. #24 is P&G, #31 General Mills, and #50: Pepsico. Syngenta is at #79.
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Some rankings would of surprise to many and a matter of pride for others. E.g., some Indian companies appear as top notch: 
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Hindustan Unilever (Indian arm of Unilever) is world’s 6th most innovative, Bharat Heavy Electricals (BHEL, from India) appears at #9, and the #15th place is occupied with pride by Infosys (Indian IT major).
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We could still guess it for HUL or Infy, but is it really that BHEL is world’s 9th most innovative company? A lot of people won’t easily believe that the PSU would hold that position. Here, the key is to understand how Forbes estimated the positions. The bottom text says, 
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The Innovation Premium is a measure of how much investors have bid up the stock price of a company above the value of its existing business based on expectations of future innovative results (new products, services and markets). Members of the list must have $10 billion in market capitalization, spend at least 1% of their asset base on R&D and have seven years of public data.
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This explains many of the inclusions and exclusions. Anyways, I found the list predicable, surprising, and interesting, at places. 
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- Rahul

Monday, July 4, 2011

‘Goonj’ from the eyes of Darren Gest

A very interesting article from Darren, who spent some time with the NGO ‘Goonj’ while in India. It is a kind of review of Goonj, as well as a feedback for we Indians :)

I am sure you will find it very interesting.

Someway, Somehow: The valuable lesson I learned in India


Darren Gest, who earned his MBA degree from Vanderbilt in 2010, is currently a Human Capital Senior Consultant at Deloitte Consulting in Chicago.

‘Goonj’ from the eyes of Darren Gest

A very interesting article from Darren, who spent some time with the NGO ‘Goonj’ while in India. It is a kind of review of Goonj, as well as a feedback for we Indians :)

I am sure you will find it very interesting.

Someway, Somehow: The valuable lesson I learned in India

http://www.vanderbilt.edu/magazines/vanderbilt-business/2010/11/someway-somehow/

Darren Gest, who earned his MBA degree from Vanderbilt in 2010, is currently a Human Capital Senior Consultant at Deloitte Consulting in Chicago.

A very interesting article from Darren, who spent some time with the NGO ‘Goonj’ while in India. It is a kind of review of Goonj, as well as a feedback for we Indians :)

I am sure you will find it very interesting.

Someway, Somehow: The valuable lesson I learned in India

http://www.vanderbilt.edu/magazines/vanderbilt-business/2010/11/someway-somehow/

Darren Gest, who earned his MBA degree from Vanderbilt in 2010, is currently a Human Capital Senior Consultant at Deloitte Consulting in Chicago.