Friday, October 29, 2010
For Weekend Reading
Anuja Chauhan’s debut novel Zoya Factor was a runaway success. With Battle for Bittora, Chauhan brings to the table the tale of 25-year-old Jinni, whose Mumbai-based cool lifestyle is suddenly abandoned so that she can be in the run-up to Lok Sabha elections from hick town Bittora. Complete with political rivalry, history and sexy romanticism, the novel tells the exciting story of new India
http://bit.ly/aGvSL5
Time to Read!
What would you do if you were confronted with the knowledge that you could possibly save the life of an innocent man, but by doing so could put yourself and your loved ones in the way of harm or danger? A powerful question to be sure and this book puts it on the line.
Had to put the other books on hold and jump into Grisham's latest since he seldom disappoints and this has gotten good reviews so far. Time to read!
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Reqiured Reading
This is not a story about a mother and child !!!!
Locked in a fortified garden shed where his mother, kidnapped at 19, has been held and repeatedly raped for seven years. Room tells the story of their life inside, the only place Jack has ever known, and their adjustment to the outside world once they are free.
Room, is a unique and amazing story about a boy's day-to-day experience living in a small, windowless room with his mother. The 11' x 11' space between the walls of the room are actually all the boy knows because he was born there and has never left.
Room will horrify, surprise, sadden, and ultimately delight you. Addictive from the start, readers of all sorts won't want to put Room down.
What I like in the plot is that the book was told from the point of view of the child and not 'Ma'. After reading the synopsis i think the plot is funny but disturbing..
I have no doubt that this story will stay with me for a very long time, there are many things to consider. I am sure that this is totally unique, unlike any novel that I have read before.
Tuesday, October 26, 2010
Survival Story
Shetty had booked them into a resort called River View (‘A Treat of a Retreat’). It had a swimming pool and a waterfall and offered a buffet of delicacies likepulao and mutton curry, golgappas and fountains of fresh, flavoured lassi.
Leela would have been happy to be a tourist, her camera slung around her neck. She had no need, she said, to dance to the loud Bollywood music a DJ in a bandana and shades was spinning, to stand under the waterfall in her new swimsuit and black lace leggings, to mirror the couples entwined in the pool—their love, their lust, a tangible thing it was only natural to want for oneself.
She could be haappy, in a quiet, regular way, just being with Shetty.
‘If he’d only sat beside me . . .’ Leela sighed. ‘But he was happy with his blue films and beer.’
When Shetty called Leela out on her glum face, she said what she always said when she didn’t want to admit she felt low.
‘I’m expecting my MC,’ she lied.
He wondered how old Leela was. She had been thirteen when they had met, thirteen when he pursued her, fourteen when she agreed to be with him. She had been fourteen when he started looking around, fifteen when he found another ‘wife’ in another dance bar, sixteen when Leela found out and confronted him. She had been sixteen when he swore to be faithful, sixteen when he broke his promise, sixteen when he started looking around again. He hadn’t kept track since.But she had been thirteen when she had first laughed at his jokes, thirteen when he had wanted her, thirteen when he swore he would never stop making her laugh.At thirteen her teeth had been like a string of Hyderabadi pearls fit for the neck of a queen.
In Bombay, a nobody could die with nothing.
Tell me, sister, would you like to join me in prayer?’
‘Yes, that would impress her. Why were these girls so taken by God anyway? Was it because God had given them nothing? Yes. Because they had nothing, they had nothing to lose.
Leela didn’t dwell on Shetty’s quick change of heart. ‘Maybe his nasha wore off?’ It didn’t matter. He was a man in a hundred. And he made her feel like the luckiest girl in the world.
Excerpted from Beautiful Thing: Inside the Secret World of Bombay’s Dance Bars by Sonia Faleiro, Hamish Hamilton.
Unforgivable Sin
Book burning is alive and well in Mumbai.Author Rohinton Mistry's award-winning second novel "Such a Long Journey" censored at at Mumbai University.Mistry's book is many years old, but the issue is eternal. Seems like a good moment to revisit this list of banned books.
http://bit.ly/a2nBWQThursday, October 21, 2010
Ambani & Sons by Hamish Mcdonald
The book is available at 42bookz with a great discount of 35%.
check this link.
http://bit.ly/c1MrRp
Behind the Name
FortyTwo Bookz Galaxy is a leading knowledge company in India with principal offices in Mumbai, Delhi and Bengalaru. In India’s growing books industry it is a prominent publisher, distributor and online retailer through its store www.42bookz.com.
FortyTwo Bookz Galaxy has a footprint across India and representation in all the major cities and towns. Apart from a robust publishing programme and distribution of titles from domestic publishers, the company has strong partnerships with a large number of publishing companies across the world. The company aims to become the best and biggest online bookstore in India, providing patrons with top titles at the most affordable price.
The company‘s swift growth has been possible with the support of a large family consisting of book publishers, distributors, book stores, authors and other stakeholders in this wonderful industry.
The name of the company is inspired by and derived from the hugely popular book “The Hitchhiker‘s Guide to the Galaxy” written by Douglas Adam. In one episode from the story, the supercomputer, Deep Thought, calculates “42” as the answer to the ultimate question of life, the universe, and everything! We have decided to embrace 42 as the figure that denotes ultimate knowledge. FortyTwo Bookz Galaxy runs with the mission of spreading knowledge at an affordable cost to the millions of people in India through multiple initiatives.
Our publishing programme covers all genres in the fiction and non-fiction areas.
We believe in a dialogue with a potential author to explore the possibility of publishing any work. Please write to publish@fortytwobookzgalaxy.com with your contact details and we will arrange a meeting at the earliest with a Leadership Team member to discuss and finalize a partnership.