I had three choices and they all seemed equally inviting. I personally wanted something very light that would not have me straining my mind at all and be a breezing read. "Accidents like love and marriage" by Jaishree Mishra then seemed an ideal choice.I had read her debut book "Ancient Promises" and I knew her latest book would be as light as the first one was dark,brooding and introspective.
I had almost zeroed in on it when I eyed Jhumpa Lahiri's "The Namesake" and a quick mental calculation revealed I had been waiting for that book for five months now and I'd better take it when it was there.Now, I was in a dilemma since it was another of those "coming to terms with one's life" kind of a book,something I was not exactly looking forward to after ploughing through a thick book on best business practices.Then it was time to give a what-the-heck shrug and pick up both and later decide the order of reading. HAd this been the end of dilemma,I would not be writing about it. As it should not have been I saw "Bunker 13" a book that is claimed to be a catch 22 by an Indian author.Now this was getting interesting.It is one of the books that dont stay on the shelf for a whole lot of time in this library and I was tempted in three different directions and definitely I was not going to take all three of them because I have been seriously trying to cut down on my reading.
So what followed was what usually follows in such situations : talks . I started talking to this library guy and we talked about a lot of things well books basically and about a book fair in my office and he wanted to know which ones sold better than the others.Mindless talks,I should say but anyways one thing led to another and he told me about his latest buy and took out this huge greenish book that looked like a paperback Oxford dictionary at first glance.Top cover had a green hideous thing on it and a bold declaration "5 novels in one outrageous volume". Now I had enough of those three choices early on and I thought why not give this monster of a book a shot even though,being a sci-fi, it is not exactly about my domain of interest.Th book was an easy page turner inspite of being bulky and had a charm that all those new books have with dark black words neatly printed on a glistening white background and I thought those were enough reasons to make a seemingly wrong choice.
Last minute precaution.I casually flip through the book,pick out random pages and start reading.Long weird names,not again, of galaxies I guess and I start having second thoughts about taking the book with me and then I come across that line " The ships hung in the sky in much the same way that bricks don't" and I think I will survive.
PS : 20 chapters and I am kicking myself for putting it off for so long and I am kicking myself as hard as some teachers I know have not been kicked as yet unfortunately.
Wednesday, July 13, 2005
Thursday, July 07, 2005
The Simoquin Prophecies
I was a bit apprehensive when my library wallah handed out this book to me.Not that his choice is usually bad but off late I was getting this notion that I had been used as a guinea pig on one or two occasions when I had to plod through two out and out romantic books and I remember going through them in a vain hope of finding some twist somewhere but it was not to be.Also,considering the fact that I had returned all three LOTRs after reading just 1.5 of them weighed heavily on my mind as I stood there thinking of reasons to turn it down.
TSP is anothere of those fantasy books like LOTR,Harry Potter and the Douglas Adam and Terry Pratchett series of books. However,shaking my head, I just took it and decidedly for the last time.
It took me ten days, a "nothing at all to do" itinerary and a lazy Sunday afternoon to open the book for the first time and my worst fears came true.The book started off by reeling off unpronouncable names and innumerable characters each from a different world and having different physical characteristics, weilding different kinds of powers and having different number of heads.I closed the book in disgust and and then on it took me another week to get to page 50 of the book.However,by that time I was able to identify a few central characters and I decided to concentrate on them.What led me on was an excellently dishes subtle sense of humour which pervaded throughout the book and made it see saw between being a genuine fantasy or a spoof of the same.
By the time I reached page 100, I was hooked to say the least and not even weekdays or busy schedules or anything could keep me off it. This book,written by a 23 year old Indian Samit Basu, is a brilliant attempt at writing fantasy books in a way which would appeal to both readers who love such books unconditionally and people like me too who hate them. The characters in the book have an inherent sense of humor which is never allowed to come out fully.It is there as an undertone waiting to be discerned and relished.The events unfold quickly inspite of an abundance of characters and there is a lot written about all the different worlds that are mentioned at any point in the book.The central characters have their own weaknesses and that makes them real.
The author borrows heavily from LOTR, Harry Potter and a lot of Indian epics too. He has picked up events from a lot of epics and eras and tweaked them to fit into his own epic. Having said that,this book is not a copy.Its like a movie that has some scenes interspersed with the themes of other movies to heighten some effects.Although,the whole book is great,there are episodes that stand out for their stark commentary.The best is his take on heroes in a fantasy book.He introduces a school that churnes out heroes who would later be written about.He also tells about the chroniclers who move along with heroes to record their feats and how they were not averse to tweaking them to hide the hero's cowardice or to exaggerate an accout of slaying of a dragon who could hav e died on its own due to illness.Also mentioned is the role of a central figure who is usually an Oracle and whose sole duty is tp predict falsely of a dark age so as to set up a perfect launchpad for a not-so-heroic hero.
One of the many hillarious episodes is the merging of Robin Hood and the carrying away of Sanyukta by Prithvi Raj chauhan,which is an Indian historical event to hysterical heights.There is also a preparation of a so-called hero and the existence of an understated one.It is through these two characters that the book swings between what could be called a spoof to a genuine fantasy tale.However,the best character is the female lead and her typically acerbic comments on why there are more heroes than heroines in history and the delightfully wicked use of her magical powers to get her ends unabashedly.The only possible chink could be the end which is not as grand as it builds up to be but the grandness lies in the sudden twist that the story takes towards the end and this is where he defenestrates all existing norms about grand stories having grand endings too.Infact the way he has set it all up,it is excitingly poised for a sequel which I hear is underway.
Next time I wont have to think at all if offered the sequel.
TSP is anothere of those fantasy books like LOTR,Harry Potter and the Douglas Adam and Terry Pratchett series of books. However,shaking my head, I just took it and decidedly for the last time.
It took me ten days, a "nothing at all to do" itinerary and a lazy Sunday afternoon to open the book for the first time and my worst fears came true.The book started off by reeling off unpronouncable names and innumerable characters each from a different world and having different physical characteristics, weilding different kinds of powers and having different number of heads.I closed the book in disgust and and then on it took me another week to get to page 50 of the book.However,by that time I was able to identify a few central characters and I decided to concentrate on them.What led me on was an excellently dishes subtle sense of humour which pervaded throughout the book and made it see saw between being a genuine fantasy or a spoof of the same.
By the time I reached page 100, I was hooked to say the least and not even weekdays or busy schedules or anything could keep me off it. This book,written by a 23 year old Indian Samit Basu, is a brilliant attempt at writing fantasy books in a way which would appeal to both readers who love such books unconditionally and people like me too who hate them. The characters in the book have an inherent sense of humor which is never allowed to come out fully.It is there as an undertone waiting to be discerned and relished.The events unfold quickly inspite of an abundance of characters and there is a lot written about all the different worlds that are mentioned at any point in the book.The central characters have their own weaknesses and that makes them real.
The author borrows heavily from LOTR, Harry Potter and a lot of Indian epics too. He has picked up events from a lot of epics and eras and tweaked them to fit into his own epic. Having said that,this book is not a copy.Its like a movie that has some scenes interspersed with the themes of other movies to heighten some effects.Although,the whole book is great,there are episodes that stand out for their stark commentary.The best is his take on heroes in a fantasy book.He introduces a school that churnes out heroes who would later be written about.He also tells about the chroniclers who move along with heroes to record their feats and how they were not averse to tweaking them to hide the hero's cowardice or to exaggerate an accout of slaying of a dragon who could hav e died on its own due to illness.Also mentioned is the role of a central figure who is usually an Oracle and whose sole duty is tp predict falsely of a dark age so as to set up a perfect launchpad for a not-so-heroic hero.
One of the many hillarious episodes is the merging of Robin Hood and the carrying away of Sanyukta by Prithvi Raj chauhan,which is an Indian historical event to hysterical heights.There is also a preparation of a so-called hero and the existence of an understated one.It is through these two characters that the book swings between what could be called a spoof to a genuine fantasy tale.However,the best character is the female lead and her typically acerbic comments on why there are more heroes than heroines in history and the delightfully wicked use of her magical powers to get her ends unabashedly.The only possible chink could be the end which is not as grand as it builds up to be but the grandness lies in the sudden twist that the story takes towards the end and this is where he defenestrates all existing norms about grand stories having grand endings too.Infact the way he has set it all up,it is excitingly poised for a sequel which I hear is underway.
Next time I wont have to think at all if offered the sequel.
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