Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reading. Show all posts

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Where are the books? Celebrating National Book Week

The nation celebrates National Book Week from November 14-20 each year. In all the years that I lived in Mumbai, I've never seen any events commemorating the week - maybe I wasn't looking in the right places.

In Goa this year, we have an exhibition of rare books at the Archives and a series of events organised by Institute Menezes Braganza.

Google informs me that the National Book Trust is doing a little more. A week-long story telling festival in Delhi, an exhibition/sale of children's books and a list of events across the country for students will mark the Week.

Here's something else I didn't know: The week is celebrated every year by the NBT to commemorate Nehru's birthday on Nov. 14. Nehru started the NBT in 1957 to "create a reading culture in India". At least someone thought about the idea...

My question: If the week is about promoting reading, where are the books? I was expecting to see at least token 'sales' at every book-shop, programs in schools, a membership drive at the library... How does one encourage reading when access to books is poor?

Given Goa's image as a literate state, I'd love to see more bookshops lining the street. Panjim has a dismal three or four stores, a far cry from what it should have. The Library, while huge, does not really invite or encourage reading on a large scale. You can borrow just one book at a time (or pay Rs.250/- for an additional card, upto a max of 3 cards). Which means that you can't take more than 3 books at a time. Compare this with the UK (I know, I know) where, at the council library, we could take out 13 books at a time, each valid for 6 weeks and renewable online.

I'd love to know what's happening in school libraries. If you have kids, do they get to bring books from school? Let me know how that works.

Maybe I should just set up a Room to Read chapter in Goa... or my own bookshop...

Friday, October 03, 2008

The best book I've read this year

Leaving Microsoft to Change the World: An Entrepreneur's Odyssey to Educate the World's Childrenby John Wood is a fantastic example of what an inspirational book should be like. Inspired on a hiking trip in the Himalayas, Wood, a former Microsoft exec, left his job and founded Room to Read. This charity builds schools, libraries and funds the education of girls throughout the Third World.

If reading about education and projects in remote mountain villages is not your thing, pick up the book just for the writing. Who knew that a MS official could write so beautifully?!

I've read 40+ books this year; this one beats everyone of them hollow. I couldn't put it down. Even in the midst of worrying about our luggage which has finally touched Indian shores, I wanted to know what happened next.

Leaving Microsoft to Change the World inspires me to get on with my own plans to do something innovative. Remember my quest for public libraries in India? Reminds me of that quote from Om Shanti Om - "अगर किसी चीज़ को तुम पुरे दिल से चाहते हो तो पुरा कायनात उसे जुटाने में लग जाता है।" (If you wish for something from the bottom of your heart, the universe conspires to fulfil your desire)

Could this be the universe telling me something?
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Learn more about Room to Read
More about the book

Watch John Wood speaking about distributing books in Nepal




Friday, February 22, 2008

Getting Children to Read


I'm writing an article on how to get children to read.

If you are a parent, I'd love to hear any tips or advice on what books your child reads, how you encouraged your child to read or any other resources on the subject.

If you are not a parent, how about sharing your own experience? Did you enjoy reading as a child? Did your parents encourage you? If so, how? Again, any tips would be appreciated!

I'm on a deadline, so please feel free to leave a comment or ask a question. Looking forward to your responses.

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

More books than clothes

This trip to India was remarkable for the things we brought back with us. Unlike previous expeditions, clothes (who needs cotton in England, now?) were left back and we came back instead with kilos of paper - books, newspaper cuttings, magazines, mastheads, thin canvas boards (haven't seen them in art shops here) and so on.

With the global publishing industry descending on India, this was an opportune time to buy copies of Vogue India, Marie Claire, Elle and other magazines. In between wedding preparations, I studied the magazines as taught to, keeping the masthead for contact information. The paucity of guidelines and 'proper' contact information means that one has to rely on the goodwill of other writers to get an editor's email address or payment details.

A visit to the Crossword store in the shiny new domestic airport at Mumbai led to a welcome discovery - two new books from Richard Bach. After a long drought, Curious lives and the Messiah's Handbook have fallen like manna and I can't wait to read them. I also picked up Shashi Tharoor's 'Bookless in Baghdad', a compilation of essays on reading. I loved Tharoor's Riot and Bookless is an interesting glimpse into the reading (and writing) of this accomplished man.

I also picked up some lovely handmade stationery from a shop in Panjim called 'Paperworks'.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

More Pride and Prejudice

If Austen's Pride and Prejudice left you wanting for more, take a look at the flurry of books that are spin-offs of this wonderful Regency tale.


I've just finished reading two : Me and Mr.Darcy by Alexandra Potter and The True Darcy Spirit by Elizabeth Aston. Read a review here.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Accio, Book!

I've finished the latest Harry Potter book. Liked it a lot, but not as much as Book 6.

Friday, May 04, 2007

The 2007 Reading List (continued)

The TBR Pile
Blink - Malcolm Gladwell
Reflected in Water - essays on Goa
Complete works - Jane Austen
We need to talk about Kevin


Using Quark Express *
Pam Ayres : Surgically Enhanced *
Love Letters : An anthology by Antonia Fraser *
The beginners guide to oil pastels *
Write your life story *


Done
Becoming a Writer - Dorothea Brande

Going Freelance*
Winning writing competitions *
The Vein of Gold - Julia Cameron *



Wish List
Inheritance of Loss - Kiran Desai
Cross- James Patterson
Step on a Crack - James Patterson
Big Bad Wolf - James Patterson
For one more day - Mitch Albom
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows

* Library Copy

Thursday, April 26, 2007

Dangerous libraries

Our council library is turning out to be a dangerous place. Not just for my arms and wallet, but also for the rapidly-running-out-of-space in what I thought was a spacious house.

Mr R and I went to the 'Big Non-fiction Sale' two weekends ago. Each book was 50p or 3 books for a pound. Fiction books were £1 for a bag (fill as many as you can).

Between the two of us, we ended up with fifteen books. Not a lot you might say, but more than we already have space for. The treasures we picked up: books on painting (oils and pastels), sheet music (four hard bound books which would otherwise have cost a small fortune to buy) and other stuff. I picked up 3 fiction books with the intention of reading then Bookcrossing.

That was 2 weeks ago.

Yesterday I went back to the library to pick up a book for Mr R. There were new books on sale in the foyer. The temptation was just too much. Space problems be dammed, I thought. We'll buy a bigger house (yeah, right.) Or give away some of our older books (ha!). Or use the garage as storage (hmmm.)

All books were on offer for a £1 a bag this time. Rather, a basket. One of those plastic ones that you get in some supermarkets. Those hold more books than a bag for sure.

I ended up with:

1. A book on Barcelona (on our To-do list)
2. A book on Paris (definitely on our To-do list)
3. Photoshop in easy steps
4. Stephen King's 'On Writing' - Love this book; it's the only one of King's that I've managed to ever finish. Very good book for writers.
5. A book on Walks in the Chiltern Hills (in our backyard).
6-8. Three beautiful hard bound books (Beyond the horizon / The heartland of Asia / God, Gold and Glory)
- And a couple of magazines (2 interiors and one women's magazines that I could use to study and submit articles to.)

I'll stay away from the library for some time now, I think.

Friday, March 16, 2007

Public Libraries in India

Thanks to those who replied to my earlier post on public libraries in India. Additional comments are still welcome.

Having access to books is a subject close to my heart; hence this quest to find what's really going on with public libraries in India.

A preliminary search has led to some interesting discoveries, none of which I, as aam junta, was aware of before.

1. Most Indian states have adopted the Public Libraries Act which makes it the state's responsibility to run libraries in every district. Maharashtra adopted it in 1967.

2. Several organisations that work solely to promote libraries and information transfer flourish in India. They seem to hold lots of seminars, conferences and publish papers; perhaps some of that work is trickling down to the grassroots, but I cannot be sure of that.

3. Libraries come under the Department of Culture. The main culprit, oops, I mean people responsible for the state of affairs : Raja Rammohan Roy Library Foundation

4. The Education Dept of Mumbai's Municipality says they have 6 libraries providing the teachers with valuable education material. (What happens to the students?!)

5. The Dept. of Culture provides financial assistance to libraries incase someone's interested in applying.

From my fellow bloggers (and elsewhere), here are details of public libraries :

- Links to a listing of libraries
- 11 British Council Libraries in Ahmedabad, Bangalore , Bhopal, Chandigarh, Chennai, Hyderabad , Kolkata, Mumbai, New Delhi , Pune, Thiruvananthapuram
- 4 American Information Centres in Kolkata, Chennai, Mumbai, and New Delhi (USIS).

Tamil Nadu
Thanks to Shoefiend and Chandrachoodan for the info.
1. Connemera Public Library (or http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Connemara_Public_Library)
2. Theosophical Society Library, Chennai
3. UV Swaminatha Ayyar library of Tamil literature

Bihar
1. Khuda Baksh Oriental Public Library, Patna

Maharashtra
1. Asiatic Society, Mumbai
2. Bhavan's library , Mumbai
3. Dhananjayarao Gadgil Library, Pune
4. David Sassoon Library, Mumbai (is this a public library?)

Kerala
1. State Central Library

Karnataka
1. Karnataka Public Libraries (official website)

Goa
1. Panaji

West Bengal
1. National Library of India (Kolkatta)
2. North Bengal State Library


Other links to the (somewhat dismal) state of public libraries in India
1. Libraries and librarians in India on the threshold of the 3rd millennium: challenges and risks (paper)
2. Public Library Systems in India (book)
3. User expectations in Private-Public libraries in India (pdf article)
4. Reading Rooms (newspaper article / The Hindu / 2004)
5. National Policy on Public libraries in India (paper)
6. Library development in India (newspaper article / The Hindu / 2001)
7. Information literacy and public libraries in India (pdf)
8. The story of libraries in India (web article)
9. Public Library Services in India: Systems and Deficiencies (web)


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1. aam junta - common man

Thursday, March 15, 2007

A Question for Indian readers

This is for anybody who has ever lived in India or has family there. Please take a moment to read this post!

I'm trying to find information on public libraries in India. What has been your experience? Have you ever visited one and borrowed books?

In my own experience, I have stepped into one public library. That has been in Panaji, Goa.

I remember a library (or so it seemed) at the back of a municipal school near the big fish market in Chembur, Mumbai. The state of the building and the location in general did not encourage visitors. Are there many such libraries in Mumbai (and elsewhere)?

I wonder if we (India) have a government minister/department responsible for libraries etc.

Please leave a comment on the subject. If you have never seen a (public) library during your stay in India, please say so.

Friday, February 02, 2007

Waiting for Harry

July 21,2007

Mark this date in red ink in your calendar. The final HP book will be out. What will 'Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows' be like? I'm expecting the usual twists,turns and read-the-book-in-one-sitting exhilaration (even if it's 800 pages). Will the library already be accepting reservations?

I don't want anything upsetting like the last book when the ending came as a shock. No, I didn't like that at all.


Please, JKR, don't hurt Harry.


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In other news :









Israeli tourist offended by sign on Indian train

Reverse migration: Why the numbers of Britons moving to India is steadily increasing

Friday, December 01, 2006

The TBR Pile

Maximum City - Suketu Mehta
The Independium - I/II (collection of Essays from The Independent)*
Half a life - V S Naipaul *
The Star's Tennis Balls - Stephen Fry *

Done
Writing fundraising applications - Michael Norton
Finding your own north star - Martha Beck
A moveable feast - Hemingway
The sound of paper - Julia Cameron*
A Writer's Book of Days - Judy Reeves *
Further under the Duvet - Marian Keyes
The Writer's Way - Sara Maitland
Bird by Bird - Anne Lamott
Writing for magazines - Jill Dick
Writing bids and funding applications - Jane Dormer
Elegance - Kathleen Tessaro *
Writing down the bones - Natalie Goldberg *
How to write a novel *
Writing magazine - November 06 *
The Time Traveler's Wife-Audrey Niffenegger *
How to be good - Nick Hornby *

The complete fundraising handbook **
How to write successful fundraising applications - Mal Warwick **

* Personal copy. Rest all library loans.
** Want a copy for myself.


Wish list
None at the moment

Thursday, October 12, 2006

Wanted : SHE Magazine


I'm looking for the September 2006 issue of SHE Magazine (www.she.co.uk) If anybody has a copy to spare, do let me know :)


Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Thursday, March 02, 2006

No joy on this page

Right.

The first day of Spring was officially here yesterday, but you can tell by this news report that we are yet to feel the joy that usually comes with this announcement.

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I have just finished the HP & the HBP book with great reluctance. Now I'm upset at the way things have come to pass. This was most unexpected. It shouldn't be like this! Something tells me things will have to get better in Book 7 (due for release on July 7, 2007). Oh, why did things have to be so bad?!

I loved this one. I think this was my favorite of the series so far. There were twists and turns so unexpected at some places that I often gasped! Silently, of course, so as to not alarm Mr R!
Some revelations caught me off-guard - not what I had imagined or predicted.

I began the second last chapter as soon as I woke this morning, took the book with me to the loo, shared my breakfast with some pages and managed to tear myself away around 9.35 because I was surely going to miss my once-in-an-hour bus up the other hill. Wish I was able to apparate instead.

I almost wish I had taken my time to come back home, so I could have postponed reading the final chapter. Not what I expected. Not at all.

JKR should have been kinder to her readers. If I'm feeling so bad, what about the (much) younger ones?!

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Picked up this one from mumbaigirl about the Jessica Lall case, and the usual miscarriage of justice. If it bothers you, then sign up for this petition by NDTV (see right hand corner of the NDTV page), to be taken to the President. I have no doubt though, that justice will not prevail. Call me cynical. Or agree with me. When politicians, policemen and lawyers are involved together, money is more likely to talk than Liberty's scales. Add to that witnesses who should know better, but turn 'hostile' anyway and you have a hotch-potch that is reflected throughout the system. So what's new?

Sign up anyway. Maybe a million signatures will help tilt the scales. Who knows?

This may be a good time to use Legilimens. Maybe one should tell the Delhi police that. Ppfft.

Friday, February 24, 2006

I've been tagged

Like Mumbaigirl, I had no clue what being 'tagged' meant. I had a notion of what 'tags' meant through a sojourn among the pages of Technorati. But that was that. MG tagged me and I checked with her to understand what it meant. Now that I am a little wiser (ha!), here's my response to the tag questions.

1. What is the total number of books you've owned?

Once upon a time, I had a vague idea of how many books I had. In Bombay, I had a spreadsheet which told me the title and the author of the books I owned. But that was before the books spilled out of the bookshelves and into storage space under divans and beds. In the UK, I have Mr R to keep me company and together we have managed to turn every available flat surface into a book shelf.

Someday when we have the space to have an independent study with wall-to-wall bookshelves, I will have a fantastic inventory. I'll update this post then.

2. What is the last book you bought?

I think it was 'The Right to Write' by Julia Cameron, author of the Artist's Way.
Also, Mr R and I have jointly picked up several books in the past few weeks including Indian Cooking by Mridula Baljekar and a host of books on watercolors. We go out to buy groceries and come back with books.

My most extravagant book purchase in recent times has been the Writers and Artist's Yearbook 2005. I treated it like an investment into my writing career - most of the details in the book will still be valid years from now. I just have to check a website to verify.

3. What is the last book you've read?

I've just finished 'Living with Writers' a collection of essays about the joys/problems of living with a wordsmith. Because some of the essayists are prolific writers themselves, this book was an enthralling glimpse into their lives and how writing has affected their relationships.

Before that I read three thrillers by James Patterson. I am a big fan of detective fiction and I enjoy Patterson's and Patricia Cornwell's books. Whodunits appeal to my dark side :)

For work, I've been devouring books on fundraising and the voluntary sector in England. I wish such a system/strong lobby were in place in India.

4. What are you currently reading?

Don't laugh now.

I've finally got my hands on 'Harry Potter and the half blood prince'. I have been on the waiting list for J K Rowling's latest installment, since December. I love the Harry Potter books - all of them. I love the ones that are yet to be written, as well. I love books which make you quiver with excitement when you get them. You turn the first page and are greeted with characters so familiar that they seem like old friends. You can't wait till you reach the last page and find out how it all ends, but at the same time, you pray that the book goes on forever because you can't bear to have it finished. And because you suspect the next one is a long time away.

This book makes me feel all of the above. I'm on page 5 of the 606 page tome and unlike my usual speed-reading-finished-in-two-hours, I'm taking my time with this one, savoring every word like a delicious morsel of ice-cream. I wish I had Rowling's imagination to come up with something so fantastic.

5. What are the 5 books that have meant a lot to you or that you particularly enjoyed?

Five will not do justice to the many books I have loved and re-read till I knew whole passages by heart. For the purposes of this post, here goes :

1) Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand : I can't even begin to explain how much this book influenced me. I first read it in my early 20s and I skipped through many pages of long speeches and philosophy. For those of you who have read it, or seen a copy, this is not a small book! The hundreds of pages in small print make a difficult read and the subject matter is not very easy either. I read the book again , and then again and again in the past ten years. I took the time to read every sentence and enjoy every character. By this time, I was identifying very strongly with what was being said in the book because I was facing (almost) the same kind of work ethic at my job. Atlas Shrugged helped me deal with some of that frustration and I have loved it since. I also enjoyed The Fountainhead by Rand, but Atlas Shrugged has had more of an influence.

2) The Bridge Across Forever and other books by Richard Bach : From my all time favorite author, this autobiographical book made me aware of how we call things into our lives. I believe in so many of the things that Bach talks about. I enjoy RB's books because he shares his love of flying and of planes so eloquently. Give me a book about flying and I'm in heaven. Leaving Earth by Helen Humphreys was another book which I loved.

3) Talking it over by Julian Barnes : I read this book in college and was so enthralled by it that I made copious notes, writing down paragraphs, words and passages that I liked. I still have those pages somewhere. I haven't seen a copy now, for over 10 years. My local library doesn't have it, nor does the exchange ring on Bookcrossing.com . For some reason, this book, read once, has stayed with me for so long. I'd like to re-read it again just to see if my memories of a great book remain unchanged.

4) The Road Ahead by Bill Gates : I love computers and I admire what the man has done to revolutionize the way we live. This book gave me so many ideas that I then implemented at work. I was very pleased with how the book made me think.

5) Paula- My story so far by Paula Radcliffe : My adventures with running began with the 2004 Mumbai Marathon where I participated in the Dream Run to raise awareness about the Samaritans Helpline, with whom I volunteered. Last year, spurred on by the available opportunity to run and not be heckled by the general male public in Bombay, I joined a running group for women. A year later, I have registered for my first race in London. Paula Radcliffe's story is an inspiring one. We all see her as this famous marathon winner, but in reality it was many, many years before she won a major title. Her book spells out the frustration she had over those years, of injury and training, of relationship issues that cropped up because of her running. I used to think that I would like to run a marathon some day, but for now, I'll gratefully settle for the stamina and enthusiasm for a half. I'll never be a Radcliffe, but having such a role model is enough to keep you going for a few kilometers more.

Books I would liked to add:

Enough for now.

6. What book(s) would you wish to buy next?

We have an excellent library here and most of my fiction needs are met by borrowing, rather than buying. If I find something really excellent and worth having a personal copy, I'll buy it. I'm looking forward to reading :

  1. Talk to the Hand by Lynne Truss
  2. The 5th Horseman by James Patterson
  3. A Million Little pieces by James Frey (because it was on Oprah's book club)
  4. Blink by Malcolm Gladwell (Loved 'The Tipping Point' and am eager to read this much acclaimed work)
  5. Q&A by Vikas Swarup
  6. The Icarus Girl by Helen Oyeyemi
  7. How Language works by David Crystal

7. What book(s) caught your attention but you never had a chance to read?

  1. To the Lighthouse by Virginia Woolf
  2. The Lord of the Rings by Tolkein
  3. Les Miserables by Victor Hugo
  4. Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy

8. What book(s) that you've owned for so long but never read?

I've read mostly everything I have ever bought. This excludes the hundreds of books bought by Mr R - am still going through those slowly.

9. Who are you going to pass this stick to (3 persons) and why ?
Hmmm. Most of my blogger-friends have already been tagged... So I'll ask

  1. Mr R because he is much better read than me and enjoys a wide range of subjects.
  2. H&F because they are keen travelers, dancers, bird watchers and runners. Oh yes, they also have full time careers as well.
  3. Hope because I enjoy her writing and newsletter.
  4. Boo because I like her. But she's, ahem, a little busy these days, so may not have the time to reply.

If Miss V, PO or Ray were around, I would have asked them too.

Saturday, January 14, 2006

On our bedside tables



Currently reading :

Paula : My Story so far by Paula Radcliffe. An inspiring read for any runner. Her story is so full of ups and downs, injuries and disappointments and yet she has emerged stronger through it all. A real life idol for me.


Nations Favorite Poems of Celebration

I love these compilations! There are anthologies on every plausible topic available here - on railways, birthdays, dying, writing and travel, celebrations and life.

Mr R's reading 'Friend or Foe - An Anglo-Saxon History of France' by Alistair Horne

Saturday, October 01, 2005

More of P&P

Ah well. No P&P available in the library. Looks like other Austen fans had the same idea too. Picked up nine other books instead. Should keep me occupied gainfully for the next week or so.
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Reading 'The Pleasure of Reading' last week was an enlightening experience. This was an anthology of reading experiences of various authors and writers. Each was asked to list their top ten favorite books. Now, as we all know, making up such a list is not possible, because really, the list changes each day. Most of these writers also felt the same and named some of their favorite 'desert island' books. It was surprising to find some books and some authors cropping up consistently across lists. So consistent infact, that I wrote down the books just to see how many writers recommended them. That list of about 25 books is now my latest 'Reading List'. Formed of mostly classics and old favorites, the List will accompany me to libraries henceforth. Besides finally getting down to reading classics specifically, it would be interesting to see what these writers found so fascinating.

Today, among the nine books I've brought home, three are from the List :
- Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment
- Evelyn Waugh's Decline and Fall
- Virginia Woolf's To the Lighthouse

Jane Eyre was mentioned most often through the book and I've read it so many times already that I've not added it to the List. That story has the potential of being another P&P. Maybe if Colin Firth plays Mr Rochester...

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If you haven't read P&P yet and don't have a library nearby, try an e-version of the printed word. The book is available here, to read.

Another great link for ebooks, especially classics is http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/
Download your favorite books to your desktop and read at your leisure. You may ruin your eyesight, but when you have such wonderful characters for company, who cares?!

Friday, September 30, 2005

Pride and Prejudice


It was different and yet so familiar.

Mr R and I went to see the new Pride and Prejudice a few days ago. This latest adaption of Jane Austen's most popular novel stars Keira Knightley (Bend it like Beckham), Matthew MacFadyen, Judi Dench , Donald Sutherland. P&P is one of my all time favorite books and I was looking forward to seeing my favorite characters on the screen again.

This version, I think, was shot with much love - the colors and scenery of England have been captured beautifully. The photography was fabulous as was the music. It must have been hard to capture the essence of the book in 2 hours, which is where, I must admit, I came back feeling a little cheated.

I dare say I was a little prejudiced myself, having read the book innumerable times and then having watched a few weeks earlier (for the nth time!), with rapture, the BBC Drama version of the novel starring the very yummy Colin Firth. Viewers in India might remember this - it was broadcast quite frequently at one time and then the Indian version (much before Bride and Prejudice) called 'Trishna' made its appearance.

Firth played Mr Darcy in the BBC Series and this was the role that catapulted him to stardom. And what a role! Millions of girls and women skipped a heart beat (or two) watching that famous lake scene (sadly, not included in the new movie). By that time in the plot, all female viewers (and readers) were in love with him!

Mr Darcy's character personifies the 'tall, dark and handsome' stereotype. In my analysis to Mr R, I explained my theory that 'dark' in that sentence above does not refer to the color of skin or physical attributes, but rather to the character - brooding, intense, melancholy and dangerous. Colin Firth is embedded forever in that role and although Matthew MacFadyen does justice to the character, he is not brooding and awkward enough. But he was a good choice for the role anyway.

Watch a trailer of the film here. I'm off to the library to see if I can get my hands on a copy of the book again. The rest of my reading list can wait for a day :)
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A site for Jane Austen fans: www.pemberley.com . Read about all her books here.
PS: Pemberley is the name of Mr Darcy's home.

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

MRF rain day anyone?

Looks like the monsoon decided to swerve off the coast of Mumbai and head west instead.

One look out of my window this morning and I could have been fooled into thinking that it's a mid-July morning in Mumbai. The rain is pelting down and you'd laugh at the fact that they call this 'summer'. (Today's forecast is max 20 deg C and min 11 deg C, with rain.) The red roof tiles of the houses glisten and gleam in the cloudy light, as do the roads. Though unlike Maximum City, the roads don't flood (unless there's a tornado or a typhoon), there are no clogged gutters and the pavements stay clean because there are no makeshift stalls or houses to cause an obstruction. Traffic moves steadily, sometimes piling on the hill, but the signals work, drivers stick to their lanes and yes, nobody honks, even though they get impatient.

ENGLAND'S ROADS
Irrespective of the shortcomings of the people here, there's a lot to be said for the systems that are in place. The attention to detail are amazing. Just take roads for instance - a pet topic with me, so I can't help being fascinated by them. In England, as in most of Europe, they pay a great deal of attention to their roads and motorways. Every road has a name/number and color scheme that figures in the larger scheme of things and is invaluable for mapping. The Motorways, A and B roads, local roads all follow the same code for driving. The lanes are clearly painted (99% of the time) with white lines dividing the lanes. Varying lengths of lines differentiate between changing roads, as on motorways when a turn off or junction is coming up. There are (mostly) clear signs indicating roads, exits, services, again color coded. Pedestrian-safe zones are clearly indicated. Single or double yellow lines clearly tell drivers whether it is ok to park or not. There is no scope for misunderstanding or confusion if you know the rules correctly. And except for inner country roads, where mostly horses still trample, I haven't seen potholes on the major roads yet.

IMAGINE..
I know Mumbai, and India as a whole has a much larger population than England or probably all of Europe put together, but surely that can't be an excuse for not having decent roads? I don't know what they use to make the roads here, but most of the roads are tarred, not concrete. And yet they remain in pristine condition. Somehow, one doesn't imagine contractors and municipal officers taking a cut out of the contract and supplying inferior materials instead. I'm sure there's corruption here too, but somehow it doesn't affect the 'quality' of the roadworks. The attention to detail is impressive and I can only hope that we can emulate it someday.

Imagine a Mumbai with roads that are not dug up, no pot-holes, signals that work automatically and are not manually changed by traffic policemen waiting for their day's cut. Imagine your stress levels plummeting when you step into your vehicle and not hear rabid honking all around you - honking won't get you a foot ahead anyway, but it's an end to boredom. Perhaps it is a cultural thing. Indians don't honk when they come to England; the rules and road etiquette are picked up effortlessly. When in Rome...

It's hard not to wish for an easier life. We all work so hard, whether here or in India and we deserve to have something in return for the billions we pay in taxes each year. Maybe we'll see it happen in my lifetime yet...

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MAXIMUM CITY
Suketu Mehta's acclaimed book on Mumbai was shortlisted for the BBC Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction 2005. Watched the awards ceremony on telly last night. The prize went to Jonathan Coe, for his biography of once famous, now obscure British writer B.S.Johnson.

Monday, April 25, 2005

For endless Monday Mornings

This weekend has been one of those where nothing seems to go right. Mr.R is still battling with the flu and looks like I might be coming down with it too. The weather outside is absolutely dreary - grey, dull and too much rain. For a moment I can easily delude myself that this is a rainy August day in Mumbai. It seems like a good time to snuggle up with a warm drink and catch up with all the reading that I've got. On the TBR list is Alice Sebold's memoir 'Lucky', Karen Joy Fowler's 'The Jane Austen Book Club' and an adorable compilation of '101 poems to keep you sane'.

From the last mentioned book, here's a poem for Monday. This is for all those moments when you wonder where the weekend went and for the times you spend wishing that Friday was here already. How can you not be distracted?! :)

I Meant to Do My Work Today
by Richard LeGallienne

I meant to do my work today-
But a brown bird sang in the apple tree,
And a butterfly flitted across the field,
And all the leaves were calling me.

And the wind went sighing over the land
Tossing the grasses to and fro,
And a rainbow held out its shining hand-
So what could I do but laugh and go?