Showing posts with label africa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label africa. Show all posts

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

Wednesday, 20 January 2021

Call of the Raven - book review


Call of  the Raven
by
Wilbur Smith and Corban Addison
Genre: Fiction

"And what use is freedom, if it is only the freedom to live
in a slum until you are worked to death? What use is a
wage if it does not buy you enough to eat?"  - Call of the Raven

The book opens with Cambridge Union debate between Fairchild and St. John arguing for and against slavery. But what exactly is freedom? This thread runs through the entire book, what exactly is freedom?

Mungo St. John returns from Britain to America only to find his father murdered and the love of his life, Camilla, a slave on his father's estate  murdered by the militia of his father's trusted banker, Chester Marion.  He has is penniless as his entire fortune has been pledged. While young St. John vows revenge on Chester Marion, he discovers his own family is not entirely innocent and finds himself on a ship to Africa to earn his fortune. He loses his innocence about all that he considers decent and is ready to do anything for revenge but then he discovers that Camilla is alive. He changes again and now all he wants is to rescue his love while destroying his enemy in the process. Will he?  

Reading the book was a revelation. I always thought I knew what freedom was and then began to wonder if I really knew while reading this book. It is amazing how we are all slaves and free at the same time when we think about it. Is the world really free from slavery now? Are we truly free or is our freedom just an illusion while we remain slaves in the hands of the system that controls us? Is selling and buying humans really off the table in this century when you compare it to the years of slave trade? Sure, most of us are not bound physically and dragged out to work in return for three meals a day and a roof over our head but has the system truly changes ?  

The writing is like picturesque and adventurous like any Wilbur Smith novel with heroes. I would recommend everyone to read this.

To buy the book  Click here.


Thursday, 20 October 2016

The Karachi Deception – an intelligent thriller




The Karachi Deception
By Shatrujeet Nath
Genre: Spy Thriller
Available in different formats

Irshad Dilawar is an underworld don wanted in several countries including the country that protects him, Pakistan. Multiple operations are mounted to kill him in the city of Karachi simultaneously. Who will succeed in getting him or will the ISI manage to protect him or does he get away on his own? What exactly is the role of the ex-Intelligence officials of various countries in the war on terror? Shatrujeet Nath asks and answers this in his wonderful book, The Karachi Deception.

It has been a long time since I read a good spy thriller and that too based in the Indian subcontinent without involving US, Europe or Israeli players. The first 50 pages are what you would expect from most spy thrillers but after that, Nath is in a league of his own.

From a parking lot in Mali to an apartment in Amsterdam, from homes in India to safe houses in Pakistan, Nath spins a tale of double intrigue and triple betrayal.  I think this is probably the only spy thriller I have read that doesn’t have the main antagonist make an appearance except for two lines in the entire book but nevertheless doesn’t fail to thrill. It is a rare feat to pull off in fiction and especially in this genre and that too for a debut novel. The ending made me chuckle though Americans would be angered, especially the Democrats supporting Hillary.

The style of the author is crisp, engaging and easy to read as the reader is able to identify with this book on some personal level. To use a cliché, this book is a page turner.

It is a pity the author lives in India or this would have made the New York Best Seller list. To read it was like eating your favourite meal with all your favourite people in the world joining you.




 


The Karachi Deception – an intelligent thriller



The Karachi Deception
By Shatrujeet Nath
Genre: Spy Thriller
Available in different formats

Irshad Dilawar is an underworld don wanted in several countries including the country that protects him, Pakistan. Multiple operations are mounted to kill him in the city of Karachi simultaneously. Who will succeed in getting him or will the ISI manage to protect him or does he get away on his own? What exactly is the role of the ex-Intelligence officials of various countries in the war on terror? Shatrujeet Nath asks and answers this in his wonderful book, The Karachi Deception.

It has been a long time since I read a good spy thriller and that too based in the Indian subcontinent without involving US, Europe or Israeli players. The first 50 pages are what you would expect from most spy thrillers but after that, Nath is in a league of his own.

From a parking lot in Mali to an apartment in Amsterdam, from homes in India to safe houses in Pakistan, Nath spins a tale of double intrigue and triple betrayal.  I think this is probably the only spy thriller I have read that doesn’t have the main antagonist make an appearance except for two lines in the entire book but nevertheless doesn’t fail to thrill. It is a rare feat to pull off in fiction and especially in this genre and that too for a debut novel. The ending made me chuckle though Americans would be angered, especially the Democrats supporting Hillary.

The style of the author is crisp, engaging and easy to read as the reader is able to identify with this book on some personal level. To use a cliché, this book is a page turner.

It is a pity the author lives in India or this would have made the New York Best Seller list. To read it was like eating your favourite meal with all your favourite people in the world joining you.




 

Monday, 7 December 2009

Elephant Song

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For over two thousand years, man has hunted elephants for white gold but over the last decade they have become an endangered species, especially the African Elephant. What is happening that has dramatically changed the scenario? What is the difference between culling and slaughtering? Where are the markets and how is illicit ivory trade done? Wilbur Smith answers these questions and much more in his fantastic book, Elephant Song.
Dr. Daniel Armstrong, a world famous TV naturalist is in Zimbabwe’s Chiwewe National Park to film the culling of a herd of elephants, accidentally films the slaughtering of elephants. He also comes across the murder of the Park rangers including his childhood friend‘s entire family and the poaching by a powerful environment friendly company. In London, anthropologist and environmental activist Kelly Kinnear is protesting against the ruin that is about to befall the African continent while a powerful conglomerate is holding a shareholder’s meeting discuss on sharing the spoils and ruining the forests and the people. Despite mutual admiration for the other’s work, their paths differ. Will they be able to overcome their differences, mislead their killers and act together to help prevent the catastrophe?
Sweeping from the unforgiving heat of the African Sun to the palatial houses in Taiwan, from the pigmy people in African forests to the powerful conglomerates around the globe, Smith weaves a fascinating tale of greed, compassion, corruption and coups. Combining awesome realism with suspense and pace that would do a Porsche proud, Smith takes you into the beautiful, wild and magnificent continent of Africa which seems to be forever threatened by the destructive hand of man and the brave but unknown African people who rise up to the challenge every time.
Wilbur Smith was born in Central Africa and writes with a passion and knowledge that can be characterized as truly African. Educated in Michael House and Rhodes University, Smith became a full time writer in 1964 and has since written twenty six novels which have been translated in twenty six languages worldwide.
Elephant Song is an eye opener for most people whose knowledge of Africa is limited to TV channels or shows. Extremely visual in style, Wilbur Smith takes you on a tour of Africa, its politics, its people, its geography, its economy and most importantly its wild life and the magnificent African elephant whose song needs to be heard. After reading this book, you’ll never view a national park, a wild life activist or a nature channel in the same way again.
Copyright by Deepa Kandaswamy



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