The Last Bird of Paradise
by Clifford Garstang
340 Pages, Black Rose Writing
Genre: Historical Fiction
Aislinn Givvens and Elizabeth Pennington are separated by a century but Singapore is what they have in common. One is a artist and the other is art lover who loves the other woman's paintings. Both have almost similar lives and views after they experience personal losses. Givvens lives in New York and in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks agrees to move with her husband Liam to Singapore leaving behind her career and identity just like Elizabeth almost a century before her who is packed off by her aunt just before the first world war from Britain to Singapore to live with her Uncle Cyril. Both are independent women but find themselves leaving for an unknown country and despite themselves fall in love with the multicultural East.
Zigzagging across New York, Britain, Singapore and Australia and across timelines that seem so different and yet so same, Garstang gives a quick lesson on Singapore history while making us wonder, when does a woman feel emancipation? It also examines the power politics in relationships between couples and between nations which was refreshing.
The writing is crisp with colourful multi-dimensional characters as he alternates between the story of both women with ease. It was nice reading about the late Mr. Selvadurai even if it is fiction.
Apart from enjoying the book, I learnt a lot about Singapore history and was stunned there was a sepoy mutiny there too during World War 1 as the only Sepoy mutiny I knew of was Indian sepoy mutiny of 1857.
This book is highly recommended as not many write about the city-state of Singapore or the wonderful people and almost too disciplined government that borders on fascism there.
Do buy it and read it here ==== AMAZON
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Australia. Show all posts
Friday, 16 August 2024
Book Review - The Last Bird of Paradise
Thursday, 27 May 2021
Book review: Probably the most important book you will ever read - China Syndrome
China Syndrome
by Karl Taro Greenfeld
Genre: Non-fiction
2006, Harper Collins
“He then announced a new policy called “The Three Nos,” which came straight from the Communist Party Publicity Department: no talking to the media about the nature of SARS, no talking to the public about doctors’ personal experience treating the disease, and no communicating with the WHO about anything to do with SARS." - China Syndrome
This is the most important book you can ever read possibly in this century about the SARS coronavirus. Armed with detailed research and personal experience, the author takes you through the politics, economics, cultural and environmental parts of the epidemic which is continuing to this day in its mutated form. It includes what had been the behavioral or environmental change that had created the right circumstances for coronavirus to jump species - urbanization, consumerism, so called "development" and globalization.
While the world was watching and debating the War on Iraq and eyeballs worldwide were glued to TV screens on what was happening in Iraq, the world was facing a deadly global outbreak as the coronavirus had jumped species and human - human transmission was happening in what was then termed SARS. Just when the whole world was questioning the use of the existence of UN because the Iraq war was taking place, the health arm of the UN namely the WHO was working hard trying to get the Chinese government to open up. It was coordinating with multiple countries where the disease outbreak was seen like US,Vietnam, India, Thailand, Japan, Mongolia, and of course the originator, China.While American CDC discovered it was the coronavirus that caused SARS, the Chinese CDC did too but the the Chinese government gagged them from announcing it apart from indulging in under reporting of deaths, closing of industry which led to migrant worker problems and super spreading as they arrived back in remote parts of China. All the politburo did was try to save face and made it illegal to even share samples inside China which doctors from Hong Kong managed to smuggle in at great personal loss to identify. The whistle blower was Dr.Jiang Yanyong who was placed under house arrest for sending letters to the Chinese media and Communist party that they needed to inform the world and did through the TIME magazine website. Then there was Dr. Guan Yi who identified the virus and the animal which was spreading it namely the masked palm civet which is popular food in the wet markets in Shenzhen,China and Vietnam apart from SriLankan Dr. Malik Peiris who was working with Yi in HongKong.
It led to the fall of Jiang Zemin and rise of Hu Jianto. By making China, especially Southern China the global manufacturing hub for all things as the whole world chanted the mantra of "More but Cheap" during the Era of Wild Flavor and wet markets created conditions for the virus to jump species. Development and globalisation which leads to cramped work environments is perfect for the virus as it aids in speeding up replication.With globalisation in travel, we ensured the virus could be in all parts of the world within a day's time.
The writing is crisp, factual and has the humane touch which is hard to come by in this genre. It reads like a thriller which keeps
bringing the line "Truth is stranger than fiction" to mind repeatedly The last words are ominous in the book as the world is now seeing so called waves of the coronavirus aka Covid-19. Greenfeld writes about how it had already spread from civets to chickens to pigs in 2004 itself and how it was contained and treated. The virus was still among us and while the infectious disease network kept track of it, the rest of the world went back to its merry self pretending the virus is not mutating or doesn't exist.
If only this book had been made mandatory reading for all medical students worldwide, we might have been able to control the
outbreak in 2019 instead of repeating the mistakes the Chinese government did in 2002 which was replicated by governments
worldwide thanks to international flights and forgetting the SARS outbreak that was contained initially by massive killing of
certain animals. Media and social media failed to spread awareness during SARS, avian flu, swine flu and now Covid-19 - which
seems to be a mutated form of the same virus which in 2003 was termed "Breath taker" before it was given the term SARS.
Failing to review this book and following it up with stories on the ground seems to be the massive mistake that the world media has made and concentrating on the so called "War on Terror" experiences. If only there had been awareness, research for vaccines could have begun almost 20 years ago and millions of lives would have been saved and we would have been relatively less likely to be in this mess we are in now worldwide.
Buy the book here
Saturday, 6 April 2019
A Matter of Latitude
A Matter of Latitude
by Isobel Blackthorn
Genre : Mystery/Suspense Thriller
What would you do if your artist-activist husband disappears on your daughter's birthday - a birthday your husband would never miss? Would you turn into a sleuth or would you just register a police complaint and hope for the best? Do we really care about the exotic places we travel to ? While complaining about environment degradation, don't we also seek out the tourist comforts and are willing to pay heavily in these exotic holiday destinations ? Is development and corruption intertwined ? Are we as tourists actually encouraging corruption and destruction of the environment? What exactly is development ? These are questions that Isobel Blackthorn asks and answers in her wonderful book, "A Matter of Latitude".
Set in Lanzarote,one of the Canary Islands administered by Spain, Blackthorn hooks you from the first page. The author has an unusual style of narration, using two POVs, that of the artist-activist Celestino Diaz and the other one of the British Paula Diaz who is Celestino's wife searching for him. The story keeps gathering pace with mysteries galore and the reader hoping Celestino doesn't die. Blackthorn not only reveals just enough to wet one's appetite for more about Celestino Diaz but also throws enough puzzles the reader's way via her other lead character Paula to keep you trying to solve just when there are more twists and turns thrown in.
The writing style is unusually crisp and effective despite the two POVs which are made clear to the reader in her first two chapters. The pace is steady as you try to figure out if Celestino Diaz will live or die.
This is a definitive must read as it not only tantalizes but also makes you ponder about the larger issues at hand - corruption, environment and development. I will say this much, your vacations and your view of developing and under developing countries and corruption will never be the same again.
If you are looking for a good mystery book, this is the one to get. You can buy it here.
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