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30th January 2006, 04:46 AM
#41
Senior Member
Seasoned Hubber
Reading 'Anil's Ghost' by Michael Ondaatje
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30th January 2006 04:46 AM
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11th February 2006, 09:51 AM
#42
Senior Member
Regular Hubber
Originally Posted by
shambhavi
i finally got around to reading sidhartha an old book by herman hesse, i really enjoyed the book, was very fulfilling
coincidently,i have been reading this book too. it was really refreshing.esp. the river analogy.but must say i am still trying to get around the essence of the book tho it's so full of insights.any opinions?
regards,
rain
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12th February 2006, 08:16 PM
#43
i think he is kinda trying to say knowledge is everywhere only if we choose to look and listen, i thhink everything in this universe can teach us only if we stop a moment and listen, this is wat i gathered wat say?
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13th February 2006, 04:36 AM
#44
Senior Member
Veteran Hubber
Experience is the best teacher? As one of the key lessons...I think it was the redemption that he felt after experiencing and realising the limits of very other comfort/desire/pleasure before his relization of faith is crucial...good points Shambhavi
Anil's Ghost is a good read...not fully satisfying as I would have liked it to be and of course Ondaatje's fragmentism isn't any less....of all his books i've managed only to read a few...I liked his "coming through slaughter" the best...pure skills...do try and read it when you can
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18th February 2006, 12:36 AM
#45
Senior Member
Regular Hubber
thanks, guys! for the pointers. yes,it's true.i mean wat else is wisdom in man but knowledge and experience.but was actually intrigued how not just learning but unlearning too which contributes to this wisdom.it is really endearing------siddharta's trial and redemption again and again.
are his other works as good?some Hesse facts from the book-----he won his nobel prize for Magister Ludi but Siddhartha is his "most influential work".(he was very taken in by the East).Narziss and Goldmund is supposed to be "his greatest novel".Steppenwolf is another interesting work as an"account of man torn between animal instinct and bourgeois respectability"
will be a couple of chapters more to the end of this book.hope to catch up during the weekend
regards,
rain
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20th February 2006, 04:07 AM
#46
Senior Member
Senior Hubber
I reread Pankaj Mishra's "Edmund Wilson in Benares". I think that this story will resonate for anybody from small places who left for for big cities or abroad. The story appeared in 'The New york Review of Books' and was reproduced in one of the Picador books on Indian literaure.
swarup
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22nd February 2006, 03:24 PM
#47
Senior Member
Devoted Hubber
Am reading John Connolly's books. Good mix of everthing, and the writer is not 'casual' about his fiction-he researches well into his subjects and then with a good dollop of imagination sends you on an exciting roller coaster ride!
Shoba
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28th February 2006, 10:58 AM
#48
Senior Member
Senior Hubber
Anyone has read Tash Aw's Harmony Silk Factory?
It is a very depressing novel written by Tash Aw.
The writing itself is not extraordinarily splendid, but the way it unravels deserves the Booker nomination.
"The theme of surface appearance belied by deeper reality is so relentlessly explored that it becomes schematic (...) (T)he crisp promise of the initial narrating voice has not quite been fulfilled. Nevertheless, this book begins with such brio that Tash Aw’s second outing will be eagerly awaited." - Maggie Gee, Sunday Times
Read this only if you have read the book
Review By A Blogger-Same As Above
An error does not become truth by reason of multiplied propagation, nor does truth become error because nobody sees it.
~Gandhi~
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1st March 2006, 04:57 AM
#49
Senior Member
Senior Hubber
Hi! Would appreciate comments on the "Known World" - a book highly recommended by Oprah on her show recently.
Haven't had time to browse any leading book-stores yet. So, I would love a synopsis of this book, if anyone had read yet.
Thanks Guys and Ratchasi for starting a thoughtful thread!!
Demand a broader view - BBC
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1st March 2006, 06:47 AM
#50
Senior Member
Senior Hubber
An error does not become truth by reason of multiplied propagation, nor does truth become error because nobody sees it.
~Gandhi~
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