Tuesday, 29 November 2016

The Genius Virus - Page Turner



The Genius Virus 
By John Benjamin Sciarra  
254 pages , available in different formats 
Genre:  Fiction - Medical Thriller



With friends and relatives fighting on social media over the election results and the Trump Victory or the Indian government’s  overnight demonetization drive, the terrorist attacks in Kashmir , Nagaland, etc. everything seem to be spiraling into the negative.  Happy, sane people were fast becoming angry, temporarily insane people. I truly needed a break from the conversations when I found Sciarra’s “The Genius Virus.”

What if you cannot get diseases? What if you can be killed only by physical demolition like being blown up? In addition, what if your IQ is superlative but your EQ is very little?  You are a Spock and Iron Man combination with a conscience while your boss is more of a Dr. Moriarty and you are working for him?  You attempt to heal all diseases which you know your boss doesn’t want as that would cut his fund flow through every drug you create. Will your boss find out before you are done?  John Sciarra spins an intriguing page turner in his just released book, “The Genius Virus.”

Tracing historically reported random events like the 4H virus outbreak and the HIV outbreak in the 80s, the death of Rosalind Elsie Franklin who discovered the double helix structure of the DNA and as result of taking pictures of the DNA structure contracted cancer and died at the early age of 37, but Watson and Crick stole her effort for which they received the Nobel Prize, the crash of a plane in the 80s which was just “shocking news” then, and the globalization of the pharmaceutical industry today, are they all connected?

It is not often you read an intelligent page turner with history and medicinal discoveries backing it up. The Genius Virus is one such thriller and can surely make you wonder next time what you are getting yourself into when you pop up in innocuous looking pill.

The style is smart and the science is made simple, so anyone can understand. There is no shining hero to save humanity. So what will happen?  The ending is completely unexpected. 

A must read.


 
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.




 

Friday, 15 July 2016

Amazing trailer, Amazing book

Chanakya's  Chant
by Ashwin Sanghi
Publishers : Westland
Genre : Fiction






Even after watching the trailer, you still aren't convinced here is my review.

Chanakya wrote the treatise, Arthashastra - the science of wealth. His political  ploys stopped Alexander the Great from entering India, let alone conquering the Indian subcontinent and sent him back. But was Chanakya a royal minister or a rishi/sage or someone with high position? The answer is no. Still he managed to unite the feuding kingdoms in the Indian subcontinent under an ordinary youth who was made king - Chandragupta Maurya. 

India is known for its poverty and extreme wealth. Is there a modern day Chanakya to kill off the corruption and bring in a new Prime Minister who has no political pedigree?

From today's India zapping back to Indian subcontinent 2300 years ago, Ashwin Sanghi weaves a story of  intrigue, politics, revenge, terrorism and the crowning of rulers because of the silent, intelligent, ruthless kingmakers who sacrifice their personal lives to bring to power people who they think are right.

The style is crisp, the narrative intelligent, the pace is fast and the story is too realistic that it almost scared me. Trust me, it takes a lot to scare me.

What is Suvasini's curse ? What is Chanakya's chant ? What relevance does it have in India today? Read the book to find out... :-)

You can buy the book here 


Saturday, 18 June 2016


The Mahabharata Secret
by
Christopher Doyle
Genre: Fiction - Historical Thriller.
386 Pages, Om Books International.
Available in Different formats.


Most readers of my blog may be aware of the Indian epic,  Mahabharata. It is like 1000 stories in one, all inter connected and in which Bhagavad Gita is a part - the philosophical treatise which most Indians know about but do not follow. But then, this is India, so you cannot expect anything else!  So, what is the secret ? That is what I thought when I began this book. But I never expected Emperor Ashoka to make his appearance in the first few pages or that it would be a fast paced terrorist thriller that takes us through little known parts of India especially Bihar. I mean Rajasthan and Delhi where the author lives was okay but Bihar?

This book does two things. It flits back and fro through history, from Emperor Ashoka's times to the present and in between. It flits across South Asia and then inside India but more importantly, it reminds most people of South Asia about the Buddhist past of the region which lasted for around 2000 years, which is never taught in schools as if it never existed at all.

From the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddhas in Afghanistan to the ramparts of Rajasthani forts, from scientists turned terrorists of the Lakshar -e- Taiba to the hunting for clues in Ashoka pillars in Bihar, the author masterfully weaves a story of intrigue, action, puzzles and reminders of the buried past.

I purposely read it in bits because I wanted to savour the feeling of eating a delicious meal  multiple times. The style is crisp and the tone is clear.The ending didn't leave me sated but Christopher Doyle, thank you for a much needed historical thriller.

To think this debut novel in 2013 has received so little attention was shocking.


If you feel I had still not told you what the secret is, I ask you to read the book. Buy it here


© Deepa Kandaswamy, All rights reserved.

Book Review : Bald is Beautiful: A letter for a fabulous girl

    Bald is Beautiful: A letter for a fabulous girl by Dr. Carola Schmidt When a loved one - be it a family or friend especially a child get...