Oswald Pereira

Oswald Pereira

I've completed my second novel. My debut novel 'Beyond the Newsroom' was well received. IN THE PRESS: 'This book is a film crying to be made (DNA).' 'Fast-paced, it explains the intertwined fellowship between the system and the ‘unsystematic’ underworld ('Times').' 'Brings out the bitter truth of what goes behind the news (Deccan Herald).'...more »
  • Noida, UP, India
  • member since Tuesday, September 25 2007

Profile: Reviews

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  • The Enchantress of Florence: A Novel
    • Rated 0 stars

    It's a book that you will enjoy for its magnificent prose that makes the weird appear real. Salman Rushdie's numerous stories in the book don't ring true at all. But you still want to keep on reading because it all makes such fascinating reading and you get hooked on to the language, the descriptions, the absurdity of it all. If you are a lover of words, you will enjoy this book.

    Oswald Pereira wrote this review Tuesday, July 29 2008. ( reply | permalink )
  • Who Moved My Cheese?
    • Rated 0 stars

    Move on, honey! Leave behind the deadweight, the past. This is what this book tells you. Simply!

    Oswald Pereira wrote this review Tuesday, November 6 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Ghost: A Novel
    • Rated 0 stars

    It's unputdownable as a book and qualifies to be called a good 'literary thriller'. I would have liked the novel better, though, if the book was not predictable and cliched at times.

    Oswald Pereira wrote this review Friday, October 26 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Kite Runner
    • Rated 0 stars

    Extremely readable and unputownable. Not really good literaure ... But that doesn't matter. The book stirs your emotions as it is told from the heart. This may appear gimmicky at times. But then which book isnt? The bottomline is that I liked reading the book.

    Oswald Pereira wrote this review Monday, October 8 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Animal Farm
    • Rated 0 stars

    I guess I read it as a prescribed text for English. That was a long time ago. But it left a lasting impression on me for its superb allegory of communism and the faults in the system ... why communinism is not a practical proposition. That was at a time when the USSR was a powerful, thriving union. Since then the Soviet Union has collapsed, proving that the book hit the nail in the head.

    Oswald Pereira wrote this review Monday, October 8 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • Beyond the Newsroom
    • Rated 0 stars

    This is what the Indian newspaper DNA said in its review:

    TEN pages into Beyond The Newsroom and a huge cinematic screen takes over your mind. The pages fade and you see Ram Gopal Varma’s name bursting on to a screen. Varma only because he has a little gangster film oeuvre. This book is a film crying to be made. Beyond The Newsroom, then, reasserts itself as a book quite quickly. In fact, it’s a racy read. It is also a roman à clef of sorts that lifts the lid on the murky goings-on in the world of newspapers, the police, the underworld and politics. The writer is a journalist, a former crime reporter, and this book has several thinly disguised characters who once ruled the cityscape. The police commissioner, the reporters and editors mentioned, and the underworld don himself are all familiars. Narayan Swamy, Oswald Pereira’s don, is of course, the famous Matunga godfather Vardarajan Mudaliar.

    Swamy is an odd mix of criminal and do-gooding social worker, who is himself confused by his two opposing roles. As the novel progresses, Swamy the social worker tries to take control of developments but is always thwarted by Swamy the underworld don.

    Hell-bent on destroying Swamy is Mumbai police commissioner Donald Fernandez. Known as the supercop, Fernandez is a tough customer who tries every trick he can to end Swamy’s stranglehold over the city.

    But although Fernandez has his friends in the media - notably Oscar young Pinto, a crime reporter with “The Newsroom”, India’s most venerable newspaper, Swamy’s ties in the media are stronger, more effective.

    The political reporter in “The Newsroom”, the crime reporter in the Marathi daily, the business journalist known for his incisive analysis, the beautiful and lethal reporter in Madras - they are all on Swamy’s payroll and use their publications to further his various causes.

    The police force, the editor of “The Newsroom”, and the narrator, Pinto, find that Swamy’s people easily run circles around them. The book in fact opens with Pinto’s exclusive story about Swamy’s arrest being proved embarrassingly wrong. Pereira makes a scathing indictment of corruption in newspapers. He details the way articles are planned and stymied and even planted. He also provides fascinating insights into how Swamy’s men infiltrate the media. Shamefully, in real life, Swamy’s formula was successfully repeated by one of India’s leading industrialists who, at one time reportedly had 50 top Indian journalists on his rolls. Pereira explains exactly how this can happen.

    However, where the novel falters is when it comes to sustaining the main threads of its story. Pereira begins with the workings of newspapers but later switches completely to Swamy’s operations. Pinto’s character is therefore not developed. And later, Stella Kutty, the beautiful reporter, does not ring true at all. These are minor quibbles. If you want to know about life in Mumbai before the invasion of television and long before Dawood Ibrahim took over, this book is a wonderful ride.

    Beyond The Newsroom Oswald Pereira Frog Books Rs 245 255 pages

    Oswald Pereira wrote this review Wednesday, September 26 2007. ( reply | permalink )


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