I have a very eclectic book backlog right now.
The backlog has happened thanks to my abandoning of the Delhi Metro - which takes away 2 hours of reading time every day. Add to that a son, a daughter, a wife and some assorted excitement at work & play... and there is now a pile of unread books on my bedside table.
Take a look...
RD Burman: The Man, The Music
In his review of this book in yesterday's Mint, Jerry Pinto calls the subject of the book 'arguably the most important man in Hindi film music'. And the only grouse I have is with the word 'arguably'. How can there be any argument about that? No other composer in Bollywood has demonstrated as much range and as much durability as RDB.
Proof? Reading this book in the Metro today, I was on the chapter around Hare Rama Hare Krishna. And I was pleasantly surprised by a ringtone going off - Dum maro dum...
Istanbul
It is such a crying shame that I had to abandon Pamuk's best book for the 'most important man in Hindi film music'. Because three-fourths through the book and I realised that it was actually a book on Calcutta.
Be it the need for a Tintin adventure to be set in the city, the dilapidation of once-grand architecture or that amazingly accurate description of huzun, Istanbul is where my heart is.
For those of you debating whether to read it or not, let me tell you about huzun, which can only be partially described as 'collective melancholia' - a state of being I am intensely familiar with.
Pamuk talks about the feeling associated with "1950s Chevrolets that would be museum pieces in any Western city but serve here as taxis... the man who has been selling postcards in exactly the same spot for forty years... of the booksellers who wait interminably for a customer to appear..."
Amar Chitra Katha 5-in-1 Volumes (Regional Folktales of India, )
This is actually a batchmate's gift for my son. But while he is busier with the other gift (a Zoozoo mug), I am planning to relive my childhood by reading about Thugsen (a thief who returned everything he steals), Sakshi Gopal (about the man who made Lord Krishna his witness) and other characters of history and mythology.
Having read some of them earlier, I did not expect to like them as much as I did. The stories - obviously picked up from obscure texts - come alive in pithy word bubbles and simple yet descriptive illustration.
Anant Pai lives on!
The Dialogue of Pyaasa
Aamir Khan has done more for the publicity of this film than Guru Dutt ever did. By repeatedly naming it in his list of the best films ever made. While I don't subscribe to the 'best' theory, Pyaasa remains a favourite. When I first saw the film, I was in college and any talented person who rejected fame & fortune was the subject of eternal admiration.Blame it on Calcutta's huzun, but I was completely taken by Vijay, the poet who returned 'from the dead' in his own memorial meeting and poetically denounced the world. What a Bengali!
The publisher of this volume - Om Books - is doing a stellar job of bringing out a series of classic Bollywood screenplays. They have already done two of Vinod Chopra's productions (Lage Raho Munnabhai and 3 Idiots). Hope they bring out many more.
The Dead Guy Interviews
Don't you want to ask 'obnoxious and intrusive' questions to some of world's most controversial and charismatic figures? The author 'interviews' Alexander, Beethoven, Caesar, da Vinci, Einstein, Lincoln, Shakespeare and Nostradamus... among others. He does 'ask' Frida Kahlo if she waxed her brows and 'call' Napoleon Napster but there seems to be quite a bit of research under there. After all, the book is classified as 'History/Humour' and not 'Fiction'.
Oh - he didn't interview Elvis. Because he's alive, you know?
The Low Brow Guide to World History
I opened the book at a random page and the title of the chapter was 'Which of Henry VIII's wives was the most beddable?'. Other chapters include The Cold War according to Hollywood and How many balls did Hitler have? (with x-ray evidence).
I have a life-long addiction to books of inconsequential trivia and I realised that I should be in the USA because that's the only place in the world where they churn out
I also have unalloyed admiration for trivia buffs and that's where the next book comes in.
The Know-it-All: One Man's Humble Quest to become the Smartest Person in the World
Here is a guy who read through all 33 volumes of Encyclopaedia Britannica from A to Z - all 32000 pages of it.And that's not the best part - his father gave it a shot and gave up after Borneo. One of my childhood ambitions was to own the full set of the Britannica (yes, yes - don't ask) and therefore, this is the kind of book that excites me no end. And if you are the kind of person who figured out that I got it wrong in the first line, you will also love this book. The Encyclopaedia has 32 volumes and 33000 pages.
PS: I do own the full-set of Britannica. Its in 3 CDs and lies in a drawer.
10 Bad Dates with De Niro: A Book of Alternative Movie Lists
This is the book I will read last. Because I have a feeling this is going to become one of my most favourite books of all time. I will just excerpt a bit from the blurb. And drool.
"What are the Top Ten movies for making cigarettes look cool? Greatest opening-credit sequence? Most tragic farewell? Most gratuitous use of sex and violence?"
Smokin'...
I did not buy the last 4 books. I got them as gifts.
Can you imagine how well someone knows my reading tastes that he comes up with such exotic titles and I am glad to have them all? Well, that's what happens you are unsocial like me and spend every waking hour of college with pretty much one guy.
Yes, I know... our wives have a cursed existence!
Just remembered that taking advantage of Amazon UK's Super Saver Shipping to India, I have ordered three books from them - Pixarpedia, Chinatown Screenplay (long-searched for) and Roy of Rovers (35-year old Bengalis, ring a bell?). I have to buy a second bedside table, I think.
The backlog has happened thanks to my abandoning of the Delhi Metro - which takes away 2 hours of reading time every day. Add to that a son, a daughter, a wife and some assorted excitement at work & play... and there is now a pile of unread books on my bedside table.
Take a look...
RD Burman: The Man, The Music
In his review of this book in yesterday's Mint, Jerry Pinto calls the subject of the book 'arguably the most important man in Hindi film music'. And the only grouse I have is with the word 'arguably'. How can there be any argument about that? No other composer in Bollywood has demonstrated as much range and as much durability as RDB.
Proof? Reading this book in the Metro today, I was on the chapter around Hare Rama Hare Krishna. And I was pleasantly surprised by a ringtone going off - Dum maro dum...
Istanbul
It is such a crying shame that I had to abandon Pamuk's best book for the 'most important man in Hindi film music'. Because three-fourths through the book and I realised that it was actually a book on Calcutta.
Be it the need for a Tintin adventure to be set in the city, the dilapidation of once-grand architecture or that amazingly accurate description of huzun, Istanbul is where my heart is.
For those of you debating whether to read it or not, let me tell you about huzun, which can only be partially described as 'collective melancholia' - a state of being I am intensely familiar with.
Pamuk talks about the feeling associated with "1950s Chevrolets that would be museum pieces in any Western city but serve here as taxis... the man who has been selling postcards in exactly the same spot for forty years... of the booksellers who wait interminably for a customer to appear..."
Amar Chitra Katha 5-in-1 Volumes (Regional Folktales of India, )
This is actually a batchmate's gift for my son. But while he is busier with the other gift (a Zoozoo mug), I am planning to relive my childhood by reading about Thugsen (a thief who returned everything he steals), Sakshi Gopal (about the man who made Lord Krishna his witness) and other characters of history and mythology.
Having read some of them earlier, I did not expect to like them as much as I did. The stories - obviously picked up from obscure texts - come alive in pithy word bubbles and simple yet descriptive illustration.
Anant Pai lives on!
The Dialogue of Pyaasa
Aamir Khan has done more for the publicity of this film than Guru Dutt ever did. By repeatedly naming it in his list of the best films ever made. While I don't subscribe to the 'best' theory, Pyaasa remains a favourite. When I first saw the film, I was in college and any talented person who rejected fame & fortune was the subject of eternal admiration.Blame it on Calcutta's huzun, but I was completely taken by Vijay, the poet who returned 'from the dead' in his own memorial meeting and poetically denounced the world. What a Bengali!
The publisher of this volume - Om Books - is doing a stellar job of bringing out a series of classic Bollywood screenplays. They have already done two of Vinod Chopra's productions (Lage Raho Munnabhai and 3 Idiots). Hope they bring out many more.
The Dead Guy Interviews
Don't you want to ask 'obnoxious and intrusive' questions to some of world's most controversial and charismatic figures? The author 'interviews' Alexander, Beethoven, Caesar, da Vinci, Einstein, Lincoln, Shakespeare and Nostradamus... among others. He does 'ask' Frida Kahlo if she waxed her brows and 'call' Napoleon Napster but there seems to be quite a bit of research under there. After all, the book is classified as 'History/Humour' and not 'Fiction'.
Oh - he didn't interview Elvis. Because he's alive, you know?
The Low Brow Guide to World History
I opened the book at a random page and the title of the chapter was 'Which of Henry VIII's wives was the most beddable?'. Other chapters include The Cold War according to Hollywood and How many balls did Hitler have? (with x-ray evidence).
I have a life-long addiction to books of inconsequential trivia and I realised that I should be in the USA because that's the only place in the world where they churn out
I also have unalloyed admiration for trivia buffs and that's where the next book comes in.
The Know-it-All: One Man's Humble Quest to become the Smartest Person in the World
Here is a guy who read through all 33 volumes of Encyclopaedia Britannica from A to Z - all 32000 pages of it.And that's not the best part - his father gave it a shot and gave up after Borneo. One of my childhood ambitions was to own the full set of the Britannica (yes, yes - don't ask) and therefore, this is the kind of book that excites me no end. And if you are the kind of person who figured out that I got it wrong in the first line, you will also love this book. The Encyclopaedia has 32 volumes and 33000 pages.
PS: I do own the full-set of Britannica. Its in 3 CDs and lies in a drawer.
10 Bad Dates with De Niro: A Book of Alternative Movie Lists
This is the book I will read last. Because I have a feeling this is going to become one of my most favourite books of all time. I will just excerpt a bit from the blurb. And drool.
"What are the Top Ten movies for making cigarettes look cool? Greatest opening-credit sequence? Most tragic farewell? Most gratuitous use of sex and violence?"
Smokin'...
I did not buy the last 4 books. I got them as gifts.
Can you imagine how well someone knows my reading tastes that he comes up with such exotic titles and I am glad to have them all? Well, that's what happens you are unsocial like me and spend every waking hour of college with pretty much one guy.
Yes, I know... our wives have a cursed existence!
Just remembered that taking advantage of Amazon UK's Super Saver Shipping to India, I have ordered three books from them - Pixarpedia, Chinatown Screenplay (long-searched for) and Roy of Rovers (35-year old Bengalis, ring a bell?). I have to buy a second bedside table, I think.
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