Monday, August 20, 2001

Book Review: A Writer’s People by VS Naipaul

‘A Writer’s People: Ways of Looking and Feeling’
By: V. S. Naipaul
Picador
ISBN: 978-0-330-48524-1

The winner of Nobel Prize in Literature, 2001, VS Naipaul was born in Trinidad in 1932. He went on to England in 1950 on a scholarship and studied at University College, Oxford. After his college, he started writing, as a passion and profession. He has authored more than 20 books. This is the first time I got to read one of his books.

In “A Writer’s People”, VS Naipaul tries to explore “the ways we think, see and feel”. He covers a wide range of issues, along with a wide range of personalities (authors) and their books. He starts with a chapter named “the Worm in the Bud”, recounting his young days in Trinidad. He reflects on local culture, the movements to revive ‘local culture’ (by men like Albert Gomes, a city politician). He recollects poetry of Derek Walcott, and thinks about his time spent with the established and struggling writers in the profession. His analysis of people (writers/poets) and their creations are so wonderful to read. Even though those are autobiographical, the pleasure of writing is nonetheless more than any other form. For example read this paragraph:

“I was living at the time in an over-furnished, neglected attic flat in Muswell Hill. My elderly landlord and landlady had both been married before and the attic was full of their surplus furniture. A partitioned corner space in the sitting room, which was quite large, was for coal; it also had mice, bright-eyed and startled when you came upon them. The dormer window at the back overlooked a bowling green. From a house on the other side of the green, there came on some evenings the sound of someone practicing ‘When the Saints Go Marching In’. Blackbirds raided the gardens all around and brought back their booty to the dormer roof. Sometimes a cherry escaped their beaks and rolled down slowly from tile to tile, and the disappointed birds squawked and scratched on the tiles with apparent rage.” (P59)

Reading this page of his book, I became a huge fan of his writing.

In second Chapter “An English Way of Looking”, he talks much about Anthony Powell. We get to know how his open ways led to a lot of acquaintances but also those who spoke badly about him on his back. He spoke well and highly of others (fellow writers), while they insulted him in their writing and in speech behind his back.

The third chapter is more interesting. It is titled “Looking and Not Seeing: the Indian Way”. Here he reflects on issues of migration (Indians were taken to Trinidad as workers by the British, in the 19th century). As Naipaul grew up, he expected people around him in Trinidad to tell him about India, their motherland, about the villages and the cities of India. But to his surprise, no one told him any account of those. In fact he felt that no one was interested in thinking about India or remembering one’s past. Was it because they had no choice to go back to India and hence thought to forget about it? It was not always so. Once a carpet-maker came to his house (he had immigrated to Trinidad recently), and the author tried to ask him about his memories from India. The poor guy could only utter “there was a railway station”, and then went back to his work. The guy didn’t speak at all. These portions in the book have come out very well. For example, here is a portion from this chapter where author reflects:

“It wasn’t that as colonials we had forgotten or wished to forget where we had come from. The opposite was true. The India we had come from couldn’t be forgotten. It permeated our lives. In religion, rituals, festivals, much of our sacred calendar, and even in our social ideas, India lived on, even when the language began to be forgotten. It was perhaps because of this Indian completeness that we never thought to ask people who had come from India, and whose memories would have been reasonably fresh, about the country. And when we lost this idea of completeness, and a new feeling for history drove us to wonder about the circumstances of our migration, it was too late. Many of the old people we might have asked about their lives in the other place had died; and some of us, becoming truly colonial now, fell into the ways of colonial fantasy, fabricating ancestry and a past, making up in this way for what we now felt to be our nonentity.

Our immigrants, few and poor and unprotected, had brought their language, their diet; their many-sided religion, its festivals, its social and caste distinctions, sometimes small smooth colored pebbles standing (by further leap of the imagination) for the images; the conches, gongs, and bells associated with worship; other musical instruments; book rests for their bulky holy books; wood printing blocks to stamp designs on cotton; sometimes even everyday objects, brass places, water jars.

It would have been possible, from the objects the immigrants brought with them, and the religious rites and festivals they carried in their memory – taken together, like a folk memory – it would have been possible for the civilization to be reconstructed, more than is possible for the Mayan or the Etruscan, So in one way it cannot be said that the immigrants brought little from India; they brought their civilization. (P80-81)

In his quest to learn more about India, and about the time and era when his father had migrated to Trinidad, he comes across a book written by a Muslim named Rahman. Rahman had gone to Surinam when he was much young, as a worker, and in later part of life he wrote his autobiography about his experiences. The book was written in Hindi, named “Jeevan Prakash”. Curious to find more about the society and about India as it was in old days, Naipaul read his book but was hugely disappointed. In these pages he analyses the man and his book and thinks that this man always lived in an imaginary world of “Arabian Night” days. In his book, which was in fact an autobiography, Rahman writes 50 pages on “history of India” – which was merely a list of Muslim Kings and the British generals who ruled over India. He gives a detailed description of how a sick person was cured by Hakim with tablets made from mixing tortoise urine with two and a half-quarter powdered earthworm. Now Naipaul goes harsh on this absurd writer and his humorous taunt on Rahman can be seen in this sentence:  

‘The Light of Life’ ends with a poem in Hindi in praise of the Dutch queen, Wilhelmina, ‘Maharani Queen Wilhelmina Sahab Bahadur’; if Rahman had stayed in British India something as loyal to the British sovereign, and fulsome, might have come from his pen. (P88)

A major attraction of the book is Naipaul’s take on Mahatma Gandhi. He reads Gandhiji’s autobiography and tries to analyze why he wrote those portions in “My Experiments with Truth”. He thinks about the time, the environment and the acquaintances of Gandhiji, when he was actually writing some portions of the book decades after the actual events, and gives a wonderful analysis where the writer (or translator) could have gone slightly ego-boasting rather than being factual. But very soon, we see Naipaul appreciating Gandhi for his courage and strength (we see a fine balance in Naipaul as a critic). Naipaul also analyzes Nehru’s autobiography and finds it worse – Nehru just names the cities of Britain and doesn’t care to describe anything for the readers. After that, we have some pages on Vinoba Bhave and his Bhudan movement. Here, I couldn’t understand why, Naipaul turns bitter and too harsh on the man. He starts this portion with saying, “There was a foolish man, Vinoba Bhave, …” (P172) and only gets worse in the later paragraphs. Though his points are valid, but the way he calls Vinoba a “parasite” (for living in Gandhiji’s ashrams) for example, makes me wonder. The way Naipaul analyzes authors and their books by thinking about their life and circumstances at the time of actual writing of the book, if I do the analysis of this portion I think Naipaul won’t be very happy when he was writing these and must have some personal biases. Anyways, there is much more in this book than I describe here in this piece.

It has been an absolute delight to read Naipaul. Reading him, I rediscovered the beauty and pleasure of reading literature. His writing is both inspiring and revealing. I feel privileged to read one of his books and would love to read more from him.

© Rahul

Book Review: Practicing the Power of Now by Eckhart Tolle

‘Practicing the Power of Now: essential teachings, meditations and exercises from The Power of Now’
By: Eckhart Tolle
Yogi Impressions
ISBN: 81-901059-7-3

Eckhart Tolle is a Canadian (born in Germany as Ulrich Tolle, in 1948) spiritual teacher and bestselling author. He published his first book "The Power of Now" in 1997 which reached the New York Times Best Seller lists (in 2000).

The life story of Eckhart is like a rollercoaster. Eckhart had an unhappy childhood. His parents fought and separated. He suffered all through with depression, anxiety and fear. At age of 22 or so he decided to pursue studying philosophy, psychology, and literature and enrolled in the University of London. After this, he was offered a scholarship to do research at Cambridge University as a postgraduate student. His depressions didn't stop even then. But one night in 1977, at the age of 29, after having suffered from long periods of suicidal depression, Tolle says he experienced an "inner transformation." The next morning, he felt everything was miraculous and deeply peaceful. He practiced long sessions of meditation and reflected on the life and things within and around him. His book "The power of Now" came much later, in 1997. It gradually gained popularity and ultimately deserved the place in the New York Times Best Seller list.

The book starts with a discussion on the eternal, ever present ‘One Life’ beyond the myriad forms of life that are subject to birth and death; which we call God. The author calls it Being. Now the author’s concept of Being (or God) can be reflected upon in his these sentences:

“Being is not only beyond but also deep within every form as its innermost invisible and indestructible essence. This means that it is accessible to you now as your own deepest self, your true nature. But don’t seek to grasp it with your mind. Don’t try to understand it. You can know it only when the mind is still. When you are present, when your attention is fully and intensely in the Now, Being can be felt, but it can never be understood mentally.” (P20)

I found his concept of God to be similar to the one in Hinduism, or particularly in Advaita Vedanta. His thoughts on freedom can be seen in these sentences:

“The beginning of freedom is the realization that you are not the possessing entity – the thinker. Knowing this enables you to observe the entity. The moment you start watching the thinker, a higher level of consciousness becomes activated.” (P22)

I felt these thoughts were none different than the ones from J. Krishnamurti. The connections don’t end here: read these lines and find how these are different from the teachings of Geeta, when Lord Sri Krishna asked us to do action without bothering for fruits of action:

“Do not be concerned with the fruit of your action: just give attention to the action itself. The fruit will come of its own accord. This is a powerful spiritual practice.” (P48)

The book also covers topics like rising above thoughts, body’s reaction to mind, origin of fear, dissolving unconsciousness, relationship as spiritual practice, acceptance and surrender, etc. His thoughts are powerful. For example, he says on pain and attachment:

“To suddenly see that you are or have been attached to your pain can be quite a shocking realization. The moment you realize this, you have broken the attachment.” (P88)

In the chapter seven, “From addictive to enlightening relationships”, he writes:  

“Unless and until you access the consciousness frequency of presence, all relationships, and particularly intimate relationships, are deeply flawed and ultimately dysfunctional. They may seem perfect for a while, such as when you are “in love”, but invariably that apparent perfection gets disrupted as arguments, conflicts, dissatisfaction, and emotional or even physical violence occur with increasing frequency. It seems that most “love relationships” become love/hate relationships before long.

If in your relationship you experience both “love” and the opposite of “love” – attack, emotional violence, and so on – then it is likely that you are confusing ego attachment and addictive clinging with love. You cannot love your partner one moment and attack him or her the next. True love has no opposite. If your “love” has an opposite, then it is not love but a strange ego-need for a more complete and deeper sense of self, a need that the other person temporarily meets. It is the ego’s substitute for salvation, and for a short time it almost does feel like salvation.

But there comes a time when your partner behaves in ways that fail to meet your needs, or rather those of your ego. The feelings of fear, pain and lack that are an intrinsic part of egoic consciousness but had been covered up by the “love relationship” now resurface.” (P91-92)

After reading this book, I felt a curious connection to philosophies of Hinduism and Vedanta. When I searched about the author, I came to know that Tolle has been quoted as saying, "I feel actually that the work I do is a coming together of the teaching 'stream', if you want to call it that, of J. Krishnamurti and Ramana Maharshi". Tolle himself has mentioned texts such as the Tao Te Ching, the Bhagavad Gita and other Hindu scriptures, the Buddhist scriptures, the Old Testament and the New Testament. And after coming to know of all this, some of my doubts got cleared.

It’s a wonderful book to read. Though I found that the original book “The Power of Now” would be much better to read and this one in the series should be read by those who liked the first one.

© Rahul

Monday, July 23, 2001

Book Review: Getting Rich your Own Way by Brian Tracy


‘Getting Rich Your Own Way’: Achieve all your financial goals faster than you ever thought possible
By: Brian Tracy
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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A lot of books have been written on the topic of financial wisdom. Most of these authors are self-made millionaires (some are even billionaires) and that gives the required confidence to both the authors and readers. Brian Tracy is one coming from such a background (I read that he started working as a laborer and when he became unemployed, he went into sales and the rest as they say is history). 
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This book tells us the ways in which we can work towards our financial goals so as to get them faster. He starts with the psychology of success, and some usual stuff like miracles of compound interests. Then he says “change your thinking, change your life”, telling us ways to become what he calls “money magnet”. At places his methods are conservative, like he puts too much emphasis on saving (different from investing). But then he goes on to investing also and covers it pretty exhaustively. To give an idea, he goes to the extent of suggesting a way to make money like this: buy a house which is in bad shape at cheap price, repair and refurbish it with your own hands, learning carpentry in the weekends and practicing in the evenings, and then sell the house at higher price. The idea is amazing, though the methodology may not be acceptable to all. He also asks us to learn from the best and emulate them.
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I found this book different and unique in the sense that though in the book on financial wisdom, Brian Tracy has actually tried to write a self-help book covering all dimensions of success. After all, if one becomes rich without inculcating the discipline to sustain it, there is no point in achieving it in the first place. I highly recommend this book to all.
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- Rahul 
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P.S.Some Links of interest:
Brian Tracy’s website: http://www.briantracy.com/
Brian Tracy’s blog: http://www.briantracy.com/blog/ 

Thursday, July 5, 2001

Book Review: George Soros on Globalization


‘George Soros on Globalization’
By George Soros
Publisher: PublicAffairs New York

George Soros is an American financier, businessman and notable philanthropist focused on supporting liberal ideals. He also appears in Forbes Billionaires at #46 (#18 in United States). His profile at the Forbes website mentions, "He has given away more than $8 billion since 1979 to human rights, public health and education groups. Last year he pledged $100 million to Human Rights Watch, in part to counteract America's loss of the "moral high ground." He's also given away $150 million to Roma Rights. His philanthropic organization, called the Open Society Foundations, supports democracy and human rights in over 70 countries. (Soros is also famous as a strong critic of George W. Bush)

George Soros has written twin-books on his views on Globalization. One is this ‘On Globalization’ and the other is ‘The Bubble of American Supremacy’. In this exhaustive book titled ‘On Globalization’, he expresses his views on topics like international trade, international aid, structural reforms and financial stability. He presents a strong case for Global Open Society and also explains his SDR proposal. He stars with explaining Globalization and its impact, with giving a proper background. He explains how private enterprise is better at wealth creation than the state. But he also presents the negative sides of globalization, especially for the less-developed countries. He says, “Market fundamentalists recognize the benefits of global financial markets but ignore their shortcomings.” He says that economic analyses of the impact of globalization yield mixed results. Yes, in spite of its shortcomings, he says he is a strong supporter of globalization. He says it is mainly because of the ‘freedom’ it offers. He thinks globalization is not a zero-sum game.

In the pages of this book, he analyzes the roles of international institutions like WTP, ILO, IMF, WB, and on agreements like NAFTA, TRIMS, etc. These sections are very exhaustively covered. He asserts his proposal on SDRs (Special Drawing Rights), which is a unit of account for holding countries. At the end of the book he presents a strong case for Global Open Society.

This is a very good book recommended for those interested in international economics and global politics. The book is highly analytical and research based and readability is good.

- Rahul

Book Review: Designing & Managing the Supply Chain



‘Designing & Managing the Supply Chain: Concepts, Strategies and Case Studies’
Second Edition
By David Simchi-Levi, Philip Kaminsky and Edith Simchi-Levi
Tata McGraw Hill

Devid Simchi-Levi is a professor of engineering systems at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Phil Kaminsky is Asst. Professor at University of California, and Edith Mimchi-Levi is co-founder and VP of LogicTools Inc, a supply chain planning Software Company. (LogicTools was acquired by ILOG, which was acquired by IBM ultimately.)

This is a very comprehensive book from the authors. In fact I have myself worked on some strategic tools from the pack and could relate with the theory or logic part of the same, as described in the pages of this book. The topics covered in this book are as follows:

Introduction to SCM, logistics network configuration, inventory management and risk pooling, value of information, supply chain integration, strategic alliances, procurement and outsourcing strategies, international issues on SCM, coordinated product and supply chain design, customer value and SCM, information technology for SCM, decision support systems for SCM.

All chapters start with case studies, and the book even have many computerized games, like a beer game, a risk pool game, and an inventory spreadsheet.

A very good book which I wish I had laid my hands on during my MBA. Recommended for all supply chain practitioners, managers and students of this stream.

- Rahul

Sunday, June 24, 2001

Book Review: The Difference Maker by John C. Maxwell



‘The Difference Maker’
By John C. Maxwell
Pearson Power

When I picked up this book, I thought it was “just another book on self-help”. But just flipping over the cover, I found an acknowledgement which made me ponder. I met the first author I have read who dedicated his book to his “assistants”! And the same spirit is reflected all through the pages… It’s a different book offering a fresh take on a popular but ever-green topic. 

The center point of this book deals with our “attitude”. The author says that the attitude is the “difference maker”, which results in two people with the same skills and abilities in the same situation ending up with two totally different outcomes. John. Maxwell, a leadership expert, has done a very good work with it.

The first half of the book deals with the source of our attitude, the limitations of attitude (not to take it as an alternative for skills), the power of attitude and how can we make our attitude our biggest asset. The second half deals with topics like discouragement, change, problems, fear, and failure, which are obstacles for having a positive attitude. I found it a very practical and eye opening book; very refreshing and engaging.  

I highly recommend this book to all.

- Rahul

Wednesday, June 13, 2001

Book Review: Law of Attraction, by Michael Losier


‘Law of Attraction’
By Michael Losier
Hodder Mobius Publication


If you have read “The Secret” (by Rhonda Byrne), this book becomes evident. Yet it can reveal some things you missed in that book. When I started reading it, I thought it came from the same author, and when I realised it was from another, I wondered why. Because if I start comparing, I see it as a sequel to The Secret and see some problems with authenticity. Leaving that aside, the book contains a powerful belief or theory which tells “like attracts like”. Law of Attraction can be defined as:


“I attract to my life whatever I give my attention, energy, and focus to, whether positive or negative.”

If you fully believe on this philosophy, your life would change completely, as would change the lives of people around you. Then you won’t make negative statements (to put it according to this philosophy, I would say: “Then you would make positive statements”) about the things happening around you. The positive feelings inside you would attract more positive things to you, and you would end up being more positive and getting more of what you want to get (and less of what you want not to). I find this philosophy very powerful and worth our attempt.

Do you meet or hear someone and feel an instant connect? Or do you meet someone and instantly dislike him/her? The author says it is because we either are at the similar level of energy as the other person, or at a different level. So if we meet a person with equal energy level we would feel good, and if we meet a person of lower energy level, s/he may ‘drain us out’ to match his/her own energy levels. This is why we say, “He gives off good vibes”, or “this neighbourhood gives me negative vibes”. Interestingly, even children are comfortable with identifying good and negative vibes.

Another main feature of this book is that it actually tries to teach us a ‘formula for deliberate attraction’. Author’s thoughts are logical and the book is written in a very simple precise manner. It also has exercises and worksheets for us to make use of. It is has near 140 pages and can be finished in a single day of leisure.

A very good book I would recommend to all.

- Rahul

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Thursday, May 31, 2001

Book Review: India from Midnight to the Millennium and Beyond


‘India from Midnight to the Millennium and Beyond’
By Shashi Tharoor
Penguin

This is my first read from Shashi Tharoor’s. There are many books written on India, all from different viewpoints and capturing India’s different phases in history or different shades of life, but this book “India: from midnight to the millennium and beyond”, has its own honorable place. It is the story of India’s history, from 15 August 1947 onwards. It tells how Nehru took our nation forward with his socialism which in the end reached us to the verge of near bankruptcy in 1991. It covers policies and autocracy of Indira Gandhi and the terror of Emergency. In a way it covers the whole Nehru-Gandhi dynasty till the time of Sonia Gandhi. Along with the political leadership, the pages cover issues like economy, communalism and secularism (Hindus standpoint Vs Muslim appeasing politics in India), a big chapter on NRIs and expatriation (this chapter is an absolute delight to read), the politics of castes and reservations, and what not. The book is exhaustive and amazing to read. The only downside is that if someone like me has lived in India always, one already knows the nitty-gritty of our political system and national saga. As such Shashi Tharoor’s learned opinion and sharp representation of facts make the book still going through with delight. And for outsiders and foreigners, his sensible explanation really helps. 

I have typewritten some portions from the book. I regret errors if any. Have not given any titles to the paragraphs, but topics are evident. Just some snapshots taken from the first half of the book:  

Successive Indian govts permitted the retention of Muslim Personal Law separate from the country’s civil code and even financed Haj pilgrimages to Mecca. Two of India’s first five Presidents were Muslims, as were innumerable cabinet ministers, ambassadors, generals and supreme court justices. (P xxvi)

To them, an independent India, freed after nearly a thousand years of alien rule (first Muslim, then British), and rid of a sizeable portion of its Muslim population by Partition, had an obligation to assert its own identity, one that would be triumphantly and indigenously Hindu. They are not fundamentalist in any meaningful sense of the term, since Hinduism is uniquely a religion without fundamentals: there is no Hindu Pope, no Hindu Sunday, no single Hindu holy book, and indeed no such thing as Hindu heresy. (P xxvi)

The negative side of the ledger is easily listed: economic exploitation (often undisguised looting of everything from minerals to jewels); stunting of indigenous industry (symbolized by the deliberate barbarity with which, on at least two occasions, the British ordered the thumbs of whole communities of Indian weavers chopped off so that they couldn’t compete with the producers of Lancashire); the creation of a landless peasantry (through archy of Zamindars created by the British to maintain rural order); and general poverty, hunger, and underdevelopment. (P14)

A builder’s daughter from Torino, without a college degree, with no experience of Indian life beyond the rarefied realms of the prime minister’s residence, fiercely protective of her privacy, so reserved and unsmiling in public that she has been unkindly dubbed “the Turin shroud,” leading a billion Indians at the head of the world’s most complex, rambunctious, and violent democracy? (P 26)

Rajiv had barely begun to grow into the role when Mrs. Gandhi was assassinated by the forces of Sikh extremism, forces she had herself primed for narrow partisan purposes. In 1977 the Congress Party had been ousted in Punjab by the Sikh Akali Dal Party, an ally of Janata; Mrs. Gandhi typically decided to undermine them from the quarter they least expected, by opponents even more Sikh than the Akalis. So she encouraged (and reportedly even financed) the extreme fanaticism of a Sikh fundamentalist preacher, Jarnail Singh Bhindranwale. (P 37)

Above all, as a Hindu, I belong to the only major religion in the world that doesn’t claim to be the only true religion. (P 57)

An uncle of mine put it ironically, “In my parent’s time, during the nationalist movement, they were encouraged by Gandhi and Nehru to reject caste; we dropped our caste-driven surnames and declared caste a social evil. As a result, when I grew up, I was unaware of caste; it was an irrelevance at school, at work, in my social contacts; the last thing I thought about was the caste of someone I met. Now, in my children’s generation, the wheel has come full circle. Caste is suddenly all-important again. Your caste determines your opportunities, your prospects, your promotions. You can’t go forward unless you are a Backward.” (P 111)

The attitude of an expatriate to his homeland is that of the faithless lover who blames the woman he has spurned for not having sufficiently merited his fidelity. (P 143)

A wonderful book which I recommend to all. 

- Rahul


Book Review: Show Business, by Shashi Tharoor


‘Show Business: A Novel’
By Shashi Tharoor
Penguin

‘Show Business’ is the story of life in Mumbai’s film industry, called Bollywood. It’s the story of a young talented man Ashok who went on to become a superstar. On his way, he misses a lot of genuine friends, goes through a lot of corrupting experiences and I think he never realizes when and how he loses his integrity and character. It is a disturbing story as such, of characters losing ‘character’ and leading a life full of miseries, false put-ups, faking expressions and corrupting experiences. But that I guess is part of “show business”! 

Many a time while reading the book, it seemed to me that the author has based Ashok’s character over Amitabh Bachchan. From physical attributes to him marrying another actress who had to leave acting after wedding, many things match. Even Ashok’s entry into politics and a near fatal accident are the same. But if such similarity brings familiarity, it is for the benefit of the reader. Because in a lot of aspects it is a fresh story. The novel runs many parallel stories at the same time. In portions, it also narrates screens from movies; it’s amazing to see how Mr. Tharoor could be a super hit script writer for movies too. The climax of the story is shocking and so twisting that you don’t get it till you finish the last paragraph. 

After reading this book, I am in absolute admiration for Shashi Tharoor’s writing skills and imagination. I always knew he writes well but his fiction is also so touching, sensible and wonderful to read. Just read how sensitive this portion has become: 

“Do you have to go, Ashok?” she asks, as the ayah begins to change the diapers and we move away from the babies.

“You know I do,” I reply reasonably. After all, it is my profession. 

“You spend so little time with the girls,” she says.

What she really means, of course, is that I spend so little time with her. 

“They’ve got you, my love,” I point out. “That is the whole idea, isn’t it? One of us must be with them as much as possible. I have got to go out and earn the daal and chawal.”

“But you don’t need to work so hard any more, Ashok,” she says. “We can afford all the daal and chawal we can possibly want, and more. You told me yourself you didn’t know what to do with all the black money that has been pouring in.”

What she really means is, you don’t have to do so many films with Mehnaz Elahi. She has heard the rumors, like everyone else. But she never asks about it. Never mentions Mehnaz’s name. Proud woman, my wife. I like that about her: her pride. (P 128-129)

I haven’t read many books on life in Bollywood but I feel this novel brings many fresh perspectives, which are solely due to the writer’s own learned points of view. I highly recommend this novel to all. 

- Rahul

Tuesday, May 29, 2001

Book Review: How I Taught My Grandmother to Read and other Stories


‘How I Taught My Grandmother to Read and other Stories’
By Sudha Murty
Puffin Books

I am a Sudha Murty fan. I have never left a chance to read her books. So far I have read her (1) Gently Falls the Bakula, (2) Dollar Bahu, (3) Mahashweta, (4) Old Man And His God, (5) Wise & Otherwise, and (6) Magic Drum & other Favourite Stories. And now that I got this book from hers, I could not stop till I finished it. This book mentions that it is one for the children, though I find it equally appealing and enjoyable to all readers.

Like many of her other books, this is a collection of real-life stories with some inspiring messages. Most of the stories personally involve her or her work with Infosys Foundation, but there is also one inspiring story of NRN Murty, telling a touching tale of how his father didn’t have money to fund his engineering from an IIT and hence he had to join some nearby college. The title story of how she taught her grandmother to read, and how her grandmother touched her feet saying she was actually touching her teacher’s feet – is a very emotional one. There is one on APJ Abdul Kalam and his humbleness, and there is one where Sudha Murty’s daughter teaches her a lesson, and also one famous story of her experience with JRD Tata. There are stories touching many fabrics of our heart and soul, taking us through irony, faith, discipline, and all along there is a clear passage of a moral sense to the readers. Her language has traits of simplicity and her writing leaves a deep mark on the readers’ hearts and minds, in many cases forever. Many a time I recount her stories when faced with some similar situations in life. Also, her stories invariably give a hope for India’s better tomorrow.

I highly recommend this book to all. I suggest every child and every student in India should definitely read her book.

- Rahul

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How I Taught My Grand Mother to Read: And Other Stories