Tuesday, 29 June 2021
Book Review : The Soulmate Equation - witty and makes you wonder
by Christina Lauren
Genre: Fiction
What does it take to find a soulmate? Dr. River Pena and his scientist friends come up with a solution after testing over 100,000 couples. They identify over 3000 plus genes that lead to long term compatibility. They make an app using biotechnology to identify one's soulmate.
Jessica Davis, a freelance statistician and single mom and her friend Fizzy, a best selling romance author decide to try it out on a whim as they have seen River almost every morning at a coffee shop which they all frequent. Jess finds River physically attractive but is shocked to find the app says he is her soulmate. Both refuse to believe it and so he runs a blood DNA test just to be doubly sure and the answer is the same. They are soulmates.
While Jessica agrees to work for River's company which is to be launched in three months and be paid for public appearances with him, she wants to protect her young daughter while River wants it to be a no sex and emotion involved deal which they work into the clauses of the contract. River is the one who came up with the technology, so shouldn't he at least find out? If they are soulmates, does this mean River and Jessica can stick to the terms of the deal? Read the book to find out
I found the writing witty and wonderful. I was surprised to learn that Christina Lauren are two people but that doesn't mean it makes the book any less thrilling. It has been a long time since I laughed at science jokes and being the nerd that I am, I couldn't stop giggling and grinning all the while wondering if I would use such an app. What if there is a glitch or it turns out to be something like astrological match making which Indians swear by and use for marrying but is not based on DNA? Is romance over rated and it all boils down to just genetics?
Would you use such an app based on solid science instead of dating or matrimonial sites to look for a soulmate?
If interested, buy the book here
Tuesday, 22 June 2021
Book review : Legacy - a fun weekend read
Legacy
by Nora Roberts
Genre: Family Thriller
For those who follow my blog, the genre might sound strange as there is no such genre but Nora Roberts seemed to have created a new one with this book. It is basically a family saga and a thriller rolled into one.
Adrian Rizzo is 7 years old when her father tries to kill her. She is protected by her mother Lina Rizzo, a fitness celebrity who saves her only daughter and in the process Adrian's father dies. However Lina manages to take the heat of the press away from her daughter by dropping her off at her grandparent's home for the summer vacation.
When Adrian turns 17, she decides to start her own business and right then, she begins to get scary poems warning her she would be killed. Though she accepts it as being a part of celebrity life, she has other things to deal with like most people do - family, friends, school, work, love and loss. But the letters keep coming and she hires a PI. Is she dealing with just a celebrity stalker or is this something more?
The book is fantastically paced, crisp and to the point. Roberts blew my mind by changing the age of the protagonist by a decade in just a single chapter and it works so well that the reader would hardly notice it. That to me was amazing. Another thing about this book is that you would want to get out and exercise even though it is a thriller.
Legacy is a very delicious book and if you are a wanna be author, you can learn the tricks of writing a bestseller while feeling very satisfied reading a darn good story.
If you wish to buy it , click here
Monday, 14 June 2021
Book Review : Queen of Mahishmathi - Book 3 - Bahubali - Before the Beginning
Queen of Mahishmathi
by Anand Neelakantan
Genre: Fiction
"Politics is about mining religion and selling what is holy, son"
This is the final book of the trilogy Bahubali - Before the Beginning. It neatly ties all the loose ends and makes the story of the two part blockbuster movie Bahubali sensible. I wish the books by Neelakantan in this series had also been made into movies. This is the much needed back story for any Bahubali fans to understand the characters and their motivations.
Sivagami loves Mahadeva but why does she marry his brother, Bjjaladeva? Why does she treat Bahubali, the son of Mahadeva on par with her own son Balladeva? Why do the Kalakeyas attack Mahishmathi? How does Sivagami end up as the Queen of Mahishmthi whose word is revered by all? Why is Bijaladeva not the king but just the husband of Sivagami, the queen?
Neelakantan spins a fascinating story that crisscrosses the story of three women - Chitraveni, Achi Nagamma and Sivagami, their strategies and their love for their respective people. Chitraveni who would do anything for her daughter and the matriarchal system, Achi Nagamma who would do anything to preserve nature and Sivagami who rises from an orphan to become the queen of Mahishmathi. In telling their stories, we also learn about the people they rule over - poor who opt to become soldiers to save their family, young women who would do anything to save their children and people who consciously opt to save nature from the greed of mankind. During the Covid times, it makes one pause and think about the destruction humans have let loose in the name of development and globalisation. It also gives us hope that we can change the wave of destruction if we think about all this rationally and work together.
The writing is sharp and just when you think you know what is going to happen, the author surprises you. The book is a page turner. It covers multiple themes in politics, economics, greed, rage, cultural hegemony and life in general. Makes you wonder if the only decent politicians are women and men are mining everything from religion to hunger in politics.
If you would like to read the book, buy it here
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
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
If only this book had been made mandatory reading for all medical students worldwide, we might have been able to control the
Buy the book here
Thursday, 13 May 2021
Book review : Chaturanga
Chaturanga
by
Anand Neelakantan
Genre: Fiction
Westland , 2020
"Make up stories and repeat them often. Scream about how no one who is against Mahishmathi is going to be spared. There will be enough fools to fall for it. Nothing sells like nationalism and religion in our country. Offer prayers at all the temples along the way. Talk about our ancient culture and tradition. Fools who have done nothing in life will feel proud that they were born in this goddamn country, though they are living like worms. Be their fucking hero. They will soon be devoted to you, willing to kill and die for you, and to lynch anyone who dares question you." - Chaturanga.
Chaturanga is the second book of the prequel trilogy of "Bahubali - before the beginning" and is possibly the best book I have read so far by Anand Neelakantan. Book 1 ends with the king demanding Sivagami kill her foster father ( the general of Mahishmathi and the one who took care of her since she was orphaned) to prove her patriotism to Mahishmathi. Book 2 - Chaturanga means Chess and the book is aptly titled as this is about politics of running a kingdom and how politicians deal with the economic collapse that can lead to political collapse. It also exposes the diversion tactics politicians employ to keep the people occupied while they go after their own vision of what is right while people die just to stay in power. So does Sivagami kill her foster father who is her father's best friend just to become a landowner? How does the slave Kattappa live with himself after killing his younger brother Shivappa at the command of the prince Bijalladeva who rapes and murders Shivappa's fiance despite knowing the prince is wrong? Will the slave ever be free? What happens to the book Sivagami's father has left her and which is stolen? Does she manage to retrive it? What about rebellion of the Vaithalikas - does it die with Shivappa's death? What is Pattaraya really up to? Will Acchi Nagamma and her network of spies be able to beat the Mahishmathi rulers at their own game? How does patriarchy conquer matriarchial culturally ruled places? In the chess game of politics, does truth or power triumph? How does a freedom fighting group of idealist friends change into enemies ? Who lives and who dies? What about the disappearing children? Will someone come to their rescue? Book 2 deals with all these questions and more.
From the power corridors of Mahishmathi to the matriarchial ruled Kadiramangalam, from the leper colonies to the secret temples in the forests, Neelakantan weaves a tale of power, betrayal, injustice and survival with an ease that only a master storyteller can do. The only book I can compare it with is the Indian epic Mahabharata for the sheer number of stories within stories. Even the epic seems too simple in comparison to Chaturanga where there is no Draupadi seeking revenge or fight between cousins for power. This one is much larger as no one is related or taking revenge for betrayal but is more realistic.
The writing is crisp, Not only has his writing got better but the narration and plot points are superb. If Book 1 was a surprise, this book will blow you away as it is not only a page turner but is a insight into real politics of the world. It cuts through the crap of politicians spewing ideology and explains how politics is done in the world where the political ideology is nothing but a diversion employed by politicians to stay in power. The book ends leaving you wanting for more as you are left wondering what will happen and I am looking forward to reading the book 3.
It is a great book to read during lockdown. If you wish to buy it, click this
Book Review : Who killed Osho ?
Who killed Osho?
by Abhay Vaidya
Genre: Non fiction
Om Books International, 2017
Rajneesh aka Osho was a controversial Indian spiritual figure. He died in Pune in 1990. His business model of commune,international followers, etc. was new to the world and is the kind that so called spiritual figures in India follow today. But was he killed? If so, who are on the list of suspects? The author who is a journalist, narrows it down to whom and how Indian spirituality has become a business nowadays.
Vaidya traces the growth of Rajneesh from a small boy interested in arguments and debates to the his death at the age of 58 under mysterious circumstances and who could be possibly involved. It was news to me that the Osho's lectures and books are now copyrighted and Osho itself is a trademark which now belongs to a company based in Europe. Neither did I know that there were allegations that the then US government was against the commune in Oregon or that many of Osho's followers suspected the US government of secretly poisoning him nor that he died at young age of 58 under mysterious circumstances. He had a worldwide following which included celebrities and high profile people of the world. He also had communes in different parts of the world. It never ceases to amaze me how the death of a world renowned figure under suspicious circumstances soon devolves into who can make off with what. What is even more astounding is that the Indian government irrespective of parties in power don't really care about such people.
While Vaidya has done a good job by narrating the Osho story with documents, the writing starts off well but the pace slows down badly and only in the end picks up speed with a request for a SIT to look into how Osho died. It is an interesting book which only throws up more questions than answers. If you would like to buy the book, click here
Book review : Learned Men and Women of Ancient India
Learned Men and Women in Ancient India
by Sreelata Menon
Genre:Nonfiction
This is an interesting and informative book for children. Though by no means complete, it is a book of and about learned men and women in ancient India as the title says. What is interesting about the book is that each chapter is about one learned man or woman and starts with quotes/shlokas from the works of the men and women covered in the chapter or from rig veda and then goes to into their life and later their contributions to philosophy, aviation, surgery, mathematics, astronomy and other fields.
The learned men include Kanad to Thiruvaluvar while the women include Maitreyi to Gargi. I kind of missed Avvaiyar and other women poets whose contribution as usual is missing though their works are there in some of the oldest literature is recorded in Purananooru and Bhakti literature. That is my only complaint but in a multilingual country like India it is hard to cover so many women and men who composed and contributed to ancient literatire like Puranooru, Agananooru, Periya Puranam, Tolkapiyam, Shakuntala, Silapathikaram, etc. Maybe the author should plan to write a sequel to this book
The writing is crisp and easy to follow. Some like Charaka, Lopamudra, Bhaskarcharya II were new to me. I didn't know there were two Bhaskaras who had contributed to mathematics and thought there was just one.
If you wish to buy it, get it by clicking the link below.
Buy here
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...