Wednesday, December 29, 2021

The Edible Woman by Margaret Atwood

Just because its a big name doesn't mean it can't go bad.

This is the case here. I was never a fan (I didn't get Handmaid's Tale) and this was too flimsy to be called even a decent one.

I later read some of the reviews which talk about it being the beacon of feminism and what not but I could just see a badly connected plot. In fact, I thought that you can change the genders of all the characters and it will still sound equally stupid so don't get carried away with it being feminist.

I guess I had enough from Margaret Atwood and will not be coming back for more. But I don't know if I could lay my hands on another one and pick it up.

Love!

The Mathematics of the Breath and the Way: On Writers and Writing by Charles Bukowski

How does a writer write or what inspires a writer to write?

These questions are not answered in this book but if you are looking for a personal account of a prolific writer like Bukowski than this is going to help.

To be a good writer you need to be a writer first. Which means writing a lot even if not all of it sees the light. Also, be prepared to not making a lot of money from writing. It is not that people don't pay for the good books but the answer lies in the fact when was the last time you actually bought a book.

Second thing is don't be to harsh on yourself and better lean on to a good editor. Not all the good writers are good editors so if you're not the later (which you will know soon if you are open to listening) find one.

Lastly, there is nothing like a great thought. I believe that you start with very basic ones and one of them will eventually with become big and by that I don't mean complicated. In fact, it is going to be so simple that it wouldn't require any interpretation from the writer. Most likely everyone will connect to it on their own terms and that is the best writing.

On a lighter note I never really understood too much of a poetry but that doesn't mean that you can't. Most of the times it is going to be like if you ever tried. 

Caution - don't get carried away with the alcoholic episodes and start thinking that it is some sort of shortcut to get to good writing. It is not, no matter how many times you hear it.

Love!

The Noise of Time by Julian Barnes

 I read this for the Barnes since I read "The Sense of an Ending" earlier, and what a marvellous book it is.

It talks about the life of Dmitri Shostakovich a Russian composer who was put out in front of the world as a representative of art and culture on behalf of Stalin's Russia. It goes deep in the thoughts of the artist and how it shifts from being artistic to survivalistic.

There are different ways to look at it and the easiest is to call the people opportunistic. They can be criticised for getting moulded to the external factors and not being true to their art. This sounds moralistic but until you get down to the basic idea of staying alive. Dying for the ideas or not abandoning your ideas sound heroic but is it possible for everyone to do that?

I'm not a connoisseur of music but after reading this book I actually listened to some pieces from Shostakovich, and I couldn't find them to be following any pattern that it might have been pushed into. Maybe I need more ear training and exposure to a much larger repertoire.

Read this one. It is small but gives you some big idea on how not to judge people on their life choices. You are not in those shoes and never going to be because we come with our own shoes.

Peace!

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

The UnAmericans by Molly Antopol

 If you write well the readers are going to love it. I was never a fan of complications specially when it comes to telling a story.

The one here is so simple and beautiful that you can breeze through them. They are fresh, and all of them leave you with a thought.

I don't have any favourite here as all of them are equally good. Read it for the simplicity of storytelling.

Love

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

Amnesty by Aravind Adiga

 Why I even picked this one? The answer lies in the second chances.

He lost me on White Tiger but I was still interested in reading one more before I say no more.

So, going forward nothing from Aravind.

This one was equally haphazard and incoherent as the white tiger. Trying to push the pace and pack one day of an illegal immigrant, a murder, a lot of details in 200+ pages and it failed to register anything.

Peace


God Help the Child by Toni Morrison

 I did read the Beloved so this was an easy choice because as a writer there is no comparison for her.

However, what I didn't get was the idea of your childhood defining who you're going to be. I understand that a difficult childhood (specially in dangerous living conditions) can affect your thought process but the whole idea of missing love sounds too romanticised to be true.

This is exactly the case here and it was a difficult for me to connect here. It might not be fair to compare it with a film script but by the end of it this is what it looked like. Not like that film scripts are any less scholarly than any other format but this one failed to make the mark.

I would have skipped this one and picked something else but then I read it all and realised skipping was the better option.

If you're a fan of her writing, skip this one, and maybe pick something else from her writing.

Love

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Half Gods by Akil Kumarasamy

I am not sure if this is a different way of writing or my brain is wired to avoid over complicated writing.

I read this but don't understand a single character in the whole book. I have read books which have an open ending and they leave you with a thought to ponder. But not this one. It was written all over the places and I couldn't focus on what was told here.

I couldn't connect with the whole Arjun and Karna analogy here.

Maybe not a book for me!

Love

Wednesday, December 8, 2021

Red Birds by Mohammed Hanif

This is what you call dark comedy.
A lost pilot, a prematured kid and a bunch of misfits in a war torn camp. And, yes, there is a dog with the thoughts of his own.
While reading this one a lot of situations look so comic until you realise that they are sitting in a war zone. War is never a solution and it pushes backs or wipes out the generations.
It is written with all seriousness on a lighter note.
Worth a read!

Love