I grew up
reading Enid Blyton’s Famous Five and Secret Sevens & Malory Towers. And
Edgar Rice Burrough’s Tarzan series. And Biggles and World War II comics.
And
Chandmama, Champak and Chacha Choudhury and Vikram aur Betaal series.
And Suppandi
and Tenali Raman and tons of Indrajal Comics & ACKs ( Amar Chitra Katha).
And at home we
subscribed to Illustrated Weekly of India, Junior Statesman, Reader’s Digest
and we borrowed Sports Star & Sports Week from neighbors. And we also
peeked into Mom’s Femina and Eve’s
Weekly.
And I also read a couple of
Denise Robins and Danielle Steel mushy love stories from my sisters’
collection.
When we went
for a haircut we read the Screen and the Stardust while we waited our turns.
And on Sunday
Indian Express (Sunday Standard) we read comic strips - Bringing up Father, Phantom, Calamity Jane
and Sad Sack and Dennis the Menace and Lone Ranger– while dad and mom focused
on the cryptic crossword.
Our
cupboards were stacked with piles of dogeared second hand Nation Geographics,
Spectrum, Scientific American and Archies Digest.
And slowly
we graduated into reading Perry Mason, Agatha Christie, James Hadley Chase. And the all time favorite James Bond series by Ian Fleming!!
And then
Sidney Sheldon and Alistair MacLean and
Leon Uris (remember Mila 18?) and James Clavell (Shogun??). PG Wodehouse and Tom Sharpe came later.
And we swung
to western novels – Sudden by Oliver Strange, Louis L’amour and Zane Grey and
JT Edson and Max Brand.
And along
the way came Somerset Maugham, Daphne Du Maurier’s Rebecca and the classics –
HG Wells, Jules Verne, Thomas Hardy, Bronte sisters and many many more.
And some
Sci-fi from Arthur C. Clarke and Isaac Asimov.
And we
eagerly lapped up every new issue of Gladrags that hit the stands. Remember the
glossy full pages and centre spreads of Lisa Ray in her (skimpy) bikini?? And
later graduated to Cosmopolitan. And I will leave some other magazines in this
genre to your experience & imagination.
And we
learnt about the complexities in Chiristianity from Dan Browne series. And
court trials from John Grisham, medical thrillers by Robin cook, on horses by
Dick Francis.
And Mario
Puzo, Michael Chricton and Tom Clancy and Jeffery Arthur, Lee Child, Ayn Rand
and more and more. And I seriously avoided the likes of Fritjof Capra and Milan
Kundera and Edgar Allan Poe.
But sadly, I
did not read many Indian authors.
In my younger
days I remember reading only Khushwant Singh and RK Laxman and a few English
translaton of Indian stories. And later, Ruskin Bond who I thought was English.
I liked
Khushwant Singh – his stories, his writing style, his bawdy jokes, his attitude and the unadulterated
vulgarity in some of his writings!!!
Somehow other
Indian authors missed my radar for a
long time.
And much
later I read the Inscrutable Americans, Once upon a Raj, and other Indian
Authors including Chetan Bhagat, Shobhaa De, Arundhati Roy, Devdutt Pattanaik
and Ashok Banker.
And I got seriously
sold on Indian authors after I read Meluha and the trilogy by Amish Tripathi. A few more wonderful books followed – Asura,The
Rosabal Line, The Mahabharata Secret and Govinda. And The White Tiger and The
Family Matters.
Recently I
got a surprise gift from my investment adviser - Dont Tell The Governor by Ravi Subramanian.
A wonderful
story (fiction of course) beautifully weaved around real life incidents and recent
happenings in India
Yes, you may
have guessed it right – the RBI Governor plays the main role, the Finance
Minister must surely have a part as well. The Prime Minister walks in at the
critical time. And there is someone not exactly a villain and a starlet
included to give the story some glamour and oomph!!
And the plot
thickens as we read. Special effects are manufactured with the Khandahar
hijacking of IA plane and the grand finale leads to the Demonetization of the
Rs 1000/- notes and other currencies.
A sad ending
though, unlike our typical Hindi movies where they all live happily ever after.
How do you
like that??
And as you
read you cannot ignore drawing parallels and
imagining real life folks we have seen so often in the media and YouTube.
If you wish
to start/restart reading English fiction, this is a good book that will keep
you engrossed until the last page!
I had bought
the Kindle version since I am unable to read the print version.
So very
soon, the intelligent Amazon app recommended me ‘The Mogul’ by Vish Dhamija.
This one is
more like John Grisham with plenty of court room scenes, a double murder and a
‘who-done-it’ mystery.
And if you
have read many crime & mystery thrillers, it will not be difficult for you
to accurately guess who the guilty one could be.
Vish does a
great job in drawing out the character of The Mogul – a wealthy Business
magnate in Amchi Mumbai. Other characters are equally intense and their feelings
and attitudes are wonderfully brought out as they react to the various
situations.
Vish’s
writing is unique – in first person and the sections are short and gripping.
So here is
another book to read when you are lazing out in the sun or when you are siting
in the departure lounge waiting for your flight to get announced! I assure you
that this book will be more interesting than going thru your Whats App and Mail
messages!
And I am
going to buy the next book Amazon recommends. Let me see if there is one
written by a female author this time??
Krish..
Maybe Jhumpa Lahari or Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni? I just realized that most of the books I have read in the last couple months have been by female authors- Madeline Miller, Jin Min Lee, Chimamanda Adiche, Priya Parker, Lisa Wingate and I just picked up The far field by Madhuri Vijay!
ReplyDeleteDear 'Unknown', Sorry i missed yr comment on my Blog. thanks a ton for recommending the titles. i have read Palace of Illusions by CBD and now plan to download her book on Sita. the sample read was great. Also Jhumpa Lahiri and Arundhati Roy, one book each only. Of late i got hijacked into Amazon Audible and heard this wonderful book - The Biology of belief by Bruce Lipton. chk it out ?? Krish..
DeleteI enjoyed reading your post!
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