Tuesday, 12 January 2021

Book Review: Ntuppuppakkoranendarnnu(my grandfather had an elephant)

 This is a story  of a young girl who hails from a Muslim community in North Kerala. The author, Vaikom Basheer, weaves an honest, simple tale of this innocent femme from the time she was a child to her womanhood. The language is simple  and is in Malayalam. It is written in first person and is in the voices of a little girl and then a woman yet there is this underlying flavour of a unique personality which is obvious as the story unfolds. The local dialect is evident right from the title to the end of the book and adds to the  whole feel of the tale. The writing is an absolute beauty in its ability to convey emotions, situations and actions that tugs at your heartstrings from page to page. Apart from it story line, the author dwells into the core thoughts, practices and lifestyle of the community ,never taking sides but yet provokes your mind ever so subtly. If anybody is wondering why there is a mention of an elephant in the title, i would encourage you to read the book to find out because saying it aloud now would damage the experience. 

Personally, this book is a feather in my cap. I have always secretly felt embarassed that i have never read a book in my native language which is Malayalam (outside school books of course) and  therefore completing this book has been redemption.

Anyone who would like to treat yourself to a Malayalam book, i would recommend this one.


Cheers!!

Book Review-A Short history of nearly everything!!

 


That's exactly what the book is! The book is authored by Bill Bryson and is a marvellous work of non-fiction. The book explores the origin of our universe with us and everything in it, unravels how earth formed, plunges deep into the world of microparticles-the atoms, neutrons, electrons and many more and then weaves delicately through the world of dinosaurs, microorganisms and finally, humans. 

My personal experience while reading this book was that of wonder and admiration. I cannot but take a bow of respect to the level of preparation, commitment and hardwork that must have gone in making this happen. It is not out of place to feel whether a complete work of non fiction would be boring in some way but on the contrary. The way it is written keeps you intrigued and curious to find out more. I suspect the reason for this that all these facts are expressed through stories of the works and lives of great men and women. The language is simple yet has a certain rapture of mystery which makes you turn pages.

To state an example: A paragraph from the book "When you sit on a chair, your body is not actually in contact. The bottom is levitating at an angstrom level( a hundred milionth of a centimetre) above which is not evident to the naked eye. The rationale is your and electrons will oppose as they come close and push each other away. So essentially, we are floating but at micro-micro-micro units".

So you see, the books shows the mysterious world we live in. It gave me  glimpses into the lessons of physics, chemistry and geology that i had done while in school and hence, there was this whiff of kind nostalgia that could not be ignored. I think it a brilliant book, long and brain-racking but definitely worth a read.

Book Review: Picture Imperfect and other Byomkesh Bakshi Mysteries

  . This is my first read of 2022 and penned by an Indian Author, Saradindu Bandyopadhyay. The original work has been in Bengali and the E...