too many things in a nutshell
Essays, book reviews, critics and literature festivals...
Friday, September 23, 2016
Bookless in Bengaluru
Wednesday, March 11, 2015
Through Spring,Summer, Autumn and Winter, I knelt down and Read..!!
Wednesday, July 16, 2014
Away Reading....
Yes, its been a while now. I should start with a formal apology for keeping myself away from blogging. I had been busy with work and quite a lot of reading too whenever I found time. Had a couple of weddings to attend and a lot of socializing to do which I hold responsible for my short lived self-imposed exile from the online world.
After I finished reading Umberto Eco, I immediately started off with Orphan Pamuk's Museum of Innocence. A slow read which seemed like a never ending saga of Kemal Bey and Fusun, which finally came to an end after 2 months of tireless reading. The book excites you in the beginning, bores you in the middle and makes you feel sad and drop a tear or two at the end. A wonderful read if you have patience and a thing for melodrama.
After two months of continuous romance, I was skeptical to choose Gabriel Garcia Marquez's Love in the Time of Cholera. Another romantic tale. But the memories from my childhood trying to read it and not understanding head or tail of it, continued to haunt me day and night that I finally opened the book which my Dad had had bought in the year 1991. Marquez's magic kept me alive and eternally romantic in the days that followed that I started writing romantic one liners and sent those to whom i loved. But while reading, I was never aware that my most favourite author is going to say goodbye to us in a few days time. The guy who gifted us the bliss of one hundred years of solitude and also taught us the memory of the melancholy whores is the best you can ever have is not anymore to tell any new tale. Adios Marquez..!
Later on, I was intrigued by the psychological changes which went on inside Unni Chacko's mind. As my mind wandered through the locked doors searching for the reason for his sudden, unexpected suicide, Manu Joseph, the malayalee writer came up with a new twist in his tale "The Illicit Happiness of Other People". The book dealt with the unspoken mysteries of mind and of delusions. A fast paced read which will never bore you with unnecessary prose.
The artist of Kazuo Ishiguro's An Artist of the Floating World, took me around Japan during its glorious and post war days. A beautiful simple story, told in the most simplest of manner that you feel like rereading it. Teaches you the essence of family life and how to tackle its complexities.
I started reading Mario Vargas Llosa's The Bad Girl few days after I was done with Ishiguro. Though the starting tranquilized me with the typical Latin American explanations with lot of imagery and soothing language, it became a boring and irritating read as I turned the pages. Llosa seemed to be writing things just to made the book look humongous. But the message which he wanted to convey made a sense philosophically, though it took a long time for me to realize it. But lets not dwell too deep into it, its not worth that much. So if you wanna read a book so melodramatic that it doesn't make any apparent sense or render any kind of use, I recommend you this one. You can still read it for the fun of reading, its Latin American after all..!!
Reading Arundhati Roy these days. The God Of Small Things. I miss the Indian at times and this is what i do to cure that nostalgic sickness. Read Indian.. So that's all for now. Have to get back to work. Stay tuned.
Happy Reading...
- Nisanth Thomas
Saturday, September 28, 2013
The Name of the Rose - Umberto Eco
A confession : I do not know what to write about this book and that is why this piece of writing (what i call a review and what some might call a note of filth) has taken so long to form its shape. To talk about the book, you might even take a lifetime to complete reading it. Complex, Dark and Thrilling. You may even get lost in the plot, unable to find out where its leading you, but at the end when you finally come out of it, you would feel that you have cracked the most complex labyrinth of all times. Yes, this book is a mystery. Combining the elements of semiotics, Umberto has done a brilliant job in playing around with biblical facts and theories, not to mention the philosophical flavour he creates within.
Friday, August 9, 2013
Of love and Other Demons - Gabriel Garcia Marquez
This time Marquez tells the tale of a twelve year old girl bitten by a rabid dog and stays unaffected and in perfect health. Marquez touches the extremes of magical realism with vivid imaginations and descriptions that no human on earth can ever think of. Though I didn't find the book that gripping in the beginning but found myself unable to put it down towards the end. Marquez takes you through the superstitions of Colombian people and practice of exorcism resulted from those weird superstitions. I tell you my friend, Marquez teaches you once again to fall in love and be lost in that eternal feeling.A silent and seductive read.
-Nisanth Thomas
Friday, July 5, 2013
The Unbearable Lightness of Being - Milan Kundera
A disturbing novel set in the late 60's and early 70's of Czechoslovakia which starts with Prague Spring. Prague Spring refers to the period of political liberalization in Czechoslovakia which continued until the invasion of Russia. The story revolves around four central characters, Tomas, Tereza, Sabina and Franz. Kundera plays somersault with your mind referring to impenetrable theories of philosophy with the help of Parmenides, the ancient Greek philosopher from whom lightness was positive and heaviness negative. What is lightness..? The lack of an ultimate goal in life symbolizes lightness, if your are capable of altering yourself now and then and you live for the moment, it is lightness. Tomas and Sabina symbolize Parmenides' lightness in the novel. They practice polygamy and lack a goal in life which makes them travel around and they hate to settle down in life. Whereas Franz and Tereza represent heaviness. Franz hates to travel from one woman's bed to another and thus abandons his wife to join with his mistress. Tereza's affair with the engineer is portrayed as dangerous and sinful which leaves her terribly disturbed. While the novel gives you a good pleasure of eroticism and unbearable lust, it also teaches you the essence of living. At one point in the novel you start thinking about yourself and your ultimate meaning in life. Written in hard prose and with each sentence making you to think about random subjects, I tell you, this is one novel you must read before you die. If you wanna grab the whole meaning of it, read it at least five times in a stretch.
My connection with novel is a co incidence. I was finishing my Silent house and wandering around not knowing which one to read next. Then my cousin came in with a list of novels, in which this one was the first. Now the co incidence part. Here in the novel one of the central characters is Tomas, which is nothing but my Dad's name Thomas. Later in the novel Kundera introduces Tomas' long lost son Simon, which is my grandfather's name. So in fact i was reading about two characters whose names have got a significant meaning in my life. Kundera says, " Books are a symbol of a secret brotherhood". Here in the novel when Tomas meets Tereza in Prague, she was found carrying Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina. So his attraction towards Tereza was eternal. Thomas, my Dad and Rose , my Mom can never imagine a life without books, were they met the same way Tomas and Tereza met ? During the course of this novel, I had to undergo terrible mental unrest that I almost drove one of my friends crazy with random irrelevant messages( which i normally do, but this time it reached its extremes) and philosophical thoughts. End result : She stopped talking to me. But Kundera is a writer who really matters, read him and if you go crazy, consider its time to think about lightness and heaviness.
- Nisanth Thomas
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Silent House - Orhan Pamuk
A slow and silent read. Pamuk talks about his place Turkey and the political unrest of early 80 's. Takes you through the life of six central characters in a soliloquy kind of writing. He describes the fig trees and cherry orchards along with the nationalist communist riot in a simple but serious manner. The country side of cennethisar is described in wonderful prose through the eyes of the six central characters. Makes you fall in love with Nilgun, the communist...while u are lost listening to the stories of Faruk, the historian...when the housekeeper Recep offers you a coffee, you are far away with Metin and his folks driving on an old anadol listening to "Best of elvis", almost running over Hasan and his natinalist friends while they are out on the highway in the middle of the night on a mission to paint all the walls with nationalist slogans...while you think about home and the grandma waiting for you.