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Harris Ali

Harris Ali

A simple, independent-thinking person, a man of technology by mistake, an artist at heart :)
I am in love with books, ghazals, arts, culture and the like... more »
  • Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
  • member since March 22 2009

Reviews

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Displaying 1-10 of 36 reviews
  • A Thousand Splendid Suns
    • Rated 3 stars

    To be honest, I liked his first book, 'The Kite Runner' many times more than this. I don't mean to say that this creation of his has proved itself any inferior to his first work in terms of quality; it's something else. The narration dwells mostly on physical descriptions (which, of course, he has done wonderfully enough), and it doesn't necessarily take a Khaled Hosseini to bring forth something like this. But I don't mean that it's an easily possible task though. But I'm sure, only he can give birth to something like 'The Kite Runner', and no one else; it deals with such an abstract theme, and it needs great skill in making the reader really imbibe the feeling of something so indefinable with the help of mere words. I was literally walking along with each and every word, each and every line of 'The Kite Runner', but in this book it was hard to bring back my wandering mind in far too many places.

    Whereas the first book tells the story of the two boys Hassan and Amir, this one is about two girls Mariam and Laila. Both stories are set against the backdrop of an Afghanistan ravaged senselessly by the rule of religious fundamentalists. But I saw many people who said this second book was far better than the first one. Is it because I'm a male that I liked the first book that tells us the touching story of two male friends more? I have had this experience with the movie 'Dil Chahta Hai' which is about a group of boy-friends and the intricacies and ups and downs in their relationships. All my male friends who have seen it have liked it immensely, and I myself am a huge fan of it. But alas! all the female friends of mine who have seen that movie thought it was mere waste of time.

    Apart from the main bulk of the plot, something was there which couldn't fail to capture my interest entirely. It is the magic that flows out of his pen when he portrays love and romance and eroticism. Eventhough such scenes are not too many in this book, wherever they were, they had this mesmerising power in them which I was incapable of overlooking. It brought back to my memory once again the romantic scenes of his first book which my mind couldn't help registering with a star-mark back when I read it. With these two books, he has proved that he is simply the best at it and I believe that a romantic love story from him will do really great! And I desire with all my heart that his next novel be one such dealing with soft and tender emotions that soothe the heart and make it dream and carries one gently into a world all too different from our mundane one, where there is only love and affection and no hatred and cruelty and no deafening sounds of sinister explosives and disturbing gunshots, where our minds slips smoothly into an all-embracing peace..

    Harris Ali wrote this review Friday, May 29 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Tragedy of the Mannequins

    Tragedy of the Mannequins

    by Hassan Nasir
    • Rated 3 stars

    Hassan Nasir!
    Those were the words that captured my attention. Little wonder, I have always been fascinated by these ever-increasing number of muslim names on book covers. Especially the contemporary ones. Salman Rushdie to Asra Nomani, Khaled Hosseini to Nadeem Aslam, these names have never failed in casting that strange spell on me. The used book bearing the faded cover with marks of dried liquid drops spilt on it and sallow, dirty page-edges slightly rolled over at the corners including the paperback binding rested silently, unwanted, unfondled, unhandled, unattended by anyone, perhaps totally rejected by the person who had read it earlier, on one of the two stands on either side of the door of the cute bookshop, 'Idiom Booksellers' in Fort Cochin, speacializing in books on Indian culture, history, and literature, run by Michael of U.K. for whom Fort Cochin is a second home. But unlike other muslim authors, this book held something more delightful in it for me. As soon as I managed to pluck my eyes from the attractive light pinkish-maroonish cover art and move on to the first page, I discovered that the book was not written by someone in Afghanistan, Iran or Pakistan or some non-resident UK or USA muslim. It was someone from Kearala. A Malayalee from Cochin. Most surprisingly, Mattancherry! A first novel in English by a Malayalee in Mattancherry is indeed a thing to cherish! I had never heard of this book or the author before. Nor have I met anyone who made the slightest remark about him or his book. And not even a single entry in google search for the title of the book, Tragedy of the Mannequins, until a couple of entries were made by myself in Bookcrossing and Shelfari! Has anyone heard about this book or its author? Very curious :)

    Was this book never published? Was it just a proof copy from the press after which the author dropped the plans of publishing it? It is a possibility as there are so many errors, typographical and otherwise. Basic mistakes in the usage of language and spelling errors are so many. Perhaps this was just a draft. In a few places, the language appeared to be a bit poor. But mostly it displayed a very brilliant expression of language and an admirably flowing vocabulary. If this has been already published, it must have utterly failed and forgotten thanks to these drawbacks. Was a ghost-writer involved? Is the excellence found in parts to be attributed to them and the poor portions to a crude framework created by the author on which the former worked? The printing, paper quality and the cover art maintain high standards. The novel itself is, no doubt, a great work of art. If only some technical aspects had been taken care of!

    The plot is entirely gripping. This is one of the books that captivates the reader's attention totally. And the pages flip so fast. You just can't afford to toss the book aside and get occupied with something else without having the magical influence of the pages read to that point pulling you back to it harder and harder. My appeal to the author is if only he could make a re-examination of the book and make the necessary minor alterations and modifications, a little brushing up, or even a tiny bit of remodelling here and there and remove the detrimental, unfavourable elements (which, I must say, are not so much in the impact they make on the work as a whole as they are in their number), and ultimately hand it over to some people who know how to successfully market a good book, because I have no doubt the book is on par with, or even above par of many of the books that have been labelled international bestsellers today.

    The plot tells the story of Asokan who rejects the Gandhian doctrines infused in him by his Gandhian father from his very childhood and goes on to live his life according to his own urges and instincts, backed by the advices by his mother, and not for any ism or ideology. To my sheer joy, the entire length of the narration is interspersed heavily and colourfully with mentions of and references to numerous books, and characters and anecdotes from them, diverse personalities and ideologies and discussions of matters related to culture, literature, arts and history. The perfection in the moulding of the characters and the shrewdness in the design with which they are made to interact with each other contribute wonderfully to the success of the plot. The portrayal of Asokan, Elizabeth Domanic, Aysha(who reminded me of a certain Malayalam blogger and got me thinking if it is really her and if the author has any relation with her), Gopi and others is unforgettably vivid. Gandhi himself, in a way, has an indispensable role to play in the book. If at all I have any problem with the plot and the craft of the protagonists, it is the way he made Asokan appear to be. I doubt if the author has really fully succeeded in making the reader see Asokan the same way he wants to see him himself and wants the readers to see. The narrator of the story finds Asokan's character so praiseworthy and inspiring that he goes on to take pains in getting a posthumous biographical novel of him published and an award instituted in his name to be given away to the best students in the university Asokan studied in. But I couldn't find Asokan as much admirable as the narrator/author seems to want him to be.

    Nevertheless, I truly loved reading this book! And it is one of those books I would love to read again.

    Harris Ali wrote this review Tuesday, May 5 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Eleven Minutes
    • Rated 3 stars

    The author says: "Some books make us dream, others bring us face to face with reality, but what matters most to the author is the honesty with which a book is written."
    And now, after finishing reading this book, I'm convinced he has kept his word. He has been totally honest in the process of writing this book.

    He sets his protagonist Maria on the hard journey that ultimately helps her in discovering, and those among us who have not yet recognised recognise, the sacredness in what is known as 'sex' and to ponder on why it must always be invariably profane, taboo. This book is about desire, freedom, love, sex..

    The author has littered (to the utmost delight of the quote freak that I am:) ) all over the book with lines I wanted to quote in as many places as possible. Yeah, I was amazed how totally in tune I had been with the author throughout the book!

    I don't think anyone can write a book as this in a subtler way. It's so fully pregnant with poetry. This is how he starts the book:

    "Once upon a time, there was a prostitute called Maria. Wait a minute. 'Once upon a time' is how all the best children's stories begin and 'prostitute' is a word for adults. How can I start a book with this apparent contradiction? But since, at every moment of our lives, we all have one foot in a fairy tale and the other in the abyss, let's keep that beginning.

    Once upon a time, there was a prostitute called Maria."

    Harris Ali wrote this review Wednesday, April 22 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Bookseller of Kabul

    The Bookseller of Kabul

    by Asne Seierstad
    • Rated 2 stars

    It was a bit of a dragging read, but I managed to finish it. I don't think this is a great book. The author tells us the story of an Afghan family at the time of the Taliban regime and afterwards. She narrates incidents from this family consisting of many members, and through them tries to give us a picture of the Afghan society of the time. But I think she has been successful in neither. Neither could she weave up an interesting story out of the plot, nor show us enough of the Taliban influenced nation. Both lack depth. The account of the happenings of Sultan Khan's family has nothing in it that makes it an artistic creation of fiction. It's nothing more than a dull, monotonous report. And as she had to concentrate on the affairs of the family, she couldn't give us much of the real society shattered by the Taleban.

    I guess most of the readers who say it's a fantastic book are westerners. And the reason must be their introduction to something from the culture of the East that sounds strange and fascinating in some way as it is all different from their own. This is the same thing I felt about 'The Memoirs of a Geisha'. But I think that that book was a bit better than this.

    Harris Ali wrote this review Thursday, April 9 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Lanthanbatheriyile Luthiniyakal

    Lanthanbatheriyile Luthiniyakal

    by ??. ????. ?????
    • Rated 3 stars

    (This comment was written on 14.06.2008)

    ഈ ബുക്കീക്കൂടി എന്‍. എസ്‌. മാദവന്‍ എന്ന വല്ലാണ്ട്‌ സന്തോശിപ്പിച്ച്‌! ഇത്‌ എന്റ നാടിന്റ കതേണ്‌. എന്റ കതതന്നെ. ഇതെറങ്ങിയട്ട്‌ കൊറച്ച്‌ വര്‍ഷോയെങ്കിലും ഇപ്പഴാണ്‌ വായിക്കണത്‌. കൊച്ചിട കതേണ്‌ ഇതെന്ന് ഞാനറിഞ്ഞിര്‌ന്നില്ല. ലന്തന്‍ബത്തേരീന്ന്‌ കേട്ടപ്പ തോന്ന്യത്‌ 'ലണ്ടന്‍' ബത്തേരീന്ന് ഭാവനേലാ ശെരിക്ക്വാ ഒര്‌ സലം കാണുവെന്നും അതിന ആള്‍ക്കാര്‌ 'ലന്തന്‍'ബത്തേരീന്ന് വിളിക്കണതുവായിരിക്കും എന്നാണ്‌. പക്ഷെ വായിച്ചപ്പഴല്ലെ മനസ്സിലായത്‌ ഈ ലന്തന്‍ബത്തേരീന്ന്‌ പറയണത്‌ ബോള്‍ഗാട്ടിനേണ്‌ന്ന്‌! മാദവനാണ്‌ ശരിക്കും കൊച്ചിക്കാരന്‍. ചെറ്‌പ്പം മൊതലേള്ള കൊച്ചിട ഓര്‍മ്മകള്‌ നഷ്ടപ്പെടാതെ മനസ്സീക്കൊണ്ട്‌നടന്ന്. കൊച്ചിന ഇത്രേം ഹൃദയത്തിന്റട്‌ത്ത്‌ വെച്ചേക്കണ വേറ എഴ്‌ത്ത്‌കാര്‌ണ്ടാ? എനിക്കറിയില്ല. കൊച്ചീല നസ്രാണികള്‌ട ബാഷ അതേപോല പകര്‍ത്തീട്ട്‌ണ്ട്‌. ഇതിന്‌മുമ്പ്‌ ഇങ്ങന കണ്ടട്ട്‌ള്ളത്‌ കാലിദിന്റ ഒരേ ദേശക്കാരായ ഞങ്ങളില്‍ മാത്രോണ്‌. പക്ഷെ അത്‌ കൊച്ചീല മട്ടാഞ്ചേരീലും ഫോര്‍ട്ട്‌കൊച്ചീലുവുള്ള കാക്കാമാര്‌ട ബാഷേണ്‌. രണ്ടും എന്റ ബാഷേണ്‌. ഫോര്‍ട്ട്‌കൊച്ചീല്‌ മട്ടാഞ്ചേരിട അതിരിനോടട്‌ത്തുള്ള കാക്കാമാര്‌ട പ്രദേശോയ കുന്നുമ്പ്രത്ത്‌ ജനിച്ച്‌ പിന്ന നസ്രാണികള്‌ട സലോയ പട്ടാളത്തേക്ക്‌ പറിച്ച്‌നടപ്പെട്ട എനിക്ക്‌ രണ്ട്‌ ബാഷേം കിട്ടി. അതവാ, രണ്ടും നേരേചൊവ്വേ കിട്ടീല. പകരം രണ്ടിന്റേം കൂടിക്കൊഴഞ്ഞ ഒര്‌ മൂന്നാം ബാഷ കിട്ടി. അല്ല, അതും ശരിയല്ല. ആ മൂന്നാം ബാഷ മാദവന്റെ തലമൊറട സമയത്താണ്‌. ഞാ ന്‍ അത്‌കഴിഞ്ഞ്‌ള്ള തലമൊറേല്ലെ? അപ്പ അതിന്റ മാറ്റോണ്ട്. അദായത്‌ ഒര്‌ നാലാം ബാഷേണ്‌ ഇപ്പ എന്റ കയ്യില്‌ള്ളത്‌.


    എന്നെസ്സ്‌ മാദവന്‍പറയണ കാലത്ത്‌ ഞാന്‍ ജീവിച്ചട്ടില്ല. എന്നട്ടും മാദവന്‍ചെറ്‌പ്പത്തീ കണ്ടട്ട്‌ള്ള കാര്യങ്ങള്‌ം കാഴ്ചകളുവെക്ക ഞാനും കണ്ടട്ടുള്ളത്‌പോലെ തോന്നിപ്പോണ്‌ വായിക്കുമ്പ. ഒര്‌ തലമൊറക്ക്‌ ശേഷോള്ള കാര്യങ്ങളാണ്‌ എനിക്കറിയണത്‌, എന്നട്ടും. പിന്ന, മെഹ്ബൂബിന ഞാനും കണ്ടട്ട്‌ണ്ട്‌. തറവാട്ടിലെപ്പഴും വരുവായിര്‌ന്ന്‌. എന്ന രസിപ്പിക്കാന്‍ വേണ്ടി തലയാട്ടിച്ചിരിച്ച്‌കൊണ്ട്‌ നയാപൈസയില്ലാ, കൈയ്യിലൊര്‌ നയാപൈസയില്ലാ എന്ന പാട്ട്‌പാടിയ ആ രൂപം എനിക്കോര്‍മ്മ്‌ണ്ട്‌. എല്ല്‌ംതോലുവായ ഒരു ജുബ്ബാകാരന്റ രൂപോണ്‌ മനസ്സില്‌. പക്ഷെ അന്നൊന്നും എനിക്കറിയാമ്പാടില്ലായിര്‌ന്ന്‌ അത്‌ നാടറിയണ പാട്ട്‌കാരന്‍മെഹബൂബാണ്‌ന്ന്‌. മെഹ്ബൂബ്‌ മരിച്ച്‌ കൊറേ വര്‍ഷോം കഴിഞ്ഞട്ട്‌ ഉമ്മ പറഞ്ഞപ്പഴാണ്‌ ഞാനറിയണത്‌ അത്‌ മെഹ്ബൂബായിര്‌ന്ന്‌ന്ന്‌.


    ഈ ബുക്കീക്കൂടി എനിക്കെന്റ ഒര്‌ സംശയത്തിന്റ മറ്‌വടി കിട്ടീന്നാണ്‌ തോന്നണത്‌. ഫോര്‍ട്ട്‌കൊച്ചീല ആംഗ്ലോ-ഇന്ത്യക്കാര്‌ പോര്‍ട്ട്‌ഗീസ്‌പാരമ്പര്യക്കാരായട്ടും അവര ആംഗ്ലോ എന്ന് വിളികണതെന്ത്വൊണ്ടാണ്‌ന്നായിര്‌ന്ന്‌ എന്റ കൊറേക്കാലോയട്ടുള്ള സംശയം. പക്ഷെ മാദവന്‍ പറയണത്‌ സത്യോണെങ്കി ബ്രിട്ടീഷ്‌കാര്‌ട ഉത്തരവായിര്‌ന്ന് യൂറോപ്പ്‌പാരമ്പര്യുള്ള എല്ലാരും-- അത്‌ പോര്‍ട്ട്‌ഗീസാകട്ടെ (ചൂച്ചി?), ഡച്ച്‌(ലന്തന്‍)ആകട്ടെ, ഫ്രഞ്ച്‌(പറങ്കി)ആകട്ടെ, ഇംഗ്ലീശാകട്ടെ-- ഇനിമുതല്‍ ആംഗ്ലോ ഇന്ത്യക്കാരെന്നേ അറിയപ്പെടൊള്ളൂന്ന്‌. പക്ഷെ ഈ ബുക്ക്‌ വായിച്ചട്ടും മാറാത്ത വേറൊര്‌ സംശ്യുണ്ട്‌: യൂറോപ്പ്‌കാര്‌ നമ്മട കുര്‌വൊളകും മറ്റ്വൊക്ക കൊറേ കൊണ്ടോയ്‌ന്ന്‌ കേട്ടട്ട്‌ണ്ട്‌. പക്ഷെ നമ്മള്‌തന്നെ ദിവസോം എല്ലാ ബക്ഷണത്തിലും കുര്‌വൊളകും കറയാമ്പുവൊന്നും ഉപയോഗിക്കണില്ല. പിന്ന ഇതുവായി ഒരു ബന്ദോമില്ലാത്ത ബക്ഷണോണ്ടാക്കണ യൂറോപ്പ്‌കാര്‍ക്ക്‌ എന്തിനായിര്‌ന്ന്‌ ഇവിടന്ന്‌ ഇത്രേം സുഗന്ദവ്യജ്ഞനങ്ങള്‌? ഈ ബുക്കിലിതേകാര്യം സൂജിപ്പിക്കണ്‌ണ്ട്‌. പക്ഷെ എന്തിനാണ്‌ന്നുള്ള ഉത്തരമില്ല. ആര്‍ക്കെങ്കിലും അറിയോ?


    തീരെ ബന്ദമില്ലന്ന്‌ തോന്നണ കാര്യങ്ങള്‌ തമ്മില്‌ പരസ്പരം ബന്ദിപ്പിക്കേം അത്‌ മനോഹരോയ രീതിയിലവതരിപ്പിക്കേം ചെയ്യണത്‌ ഈ ബുക്കിലുടനീളം കാണ. അതൊര്‌ കഴിവ്‌തന്നേണ്‌. ഇതിത്രേം ഭംഗിയാട്ട്‌ റഷ്ദിയല്ലാതെ വേറാരെങ്കിലും ചെയ്തട്ട്‌ണ്ടാ? അറിയില്ല. ചെല factual ആയിട്ട്‌ള്ള പെശക്‌കള്‌ ഈ ബുക്കില്‌ണ്ട്‌ന്ന്‌ ചെലര്‌ കണ്ട്‌പിടിച്ചട്ട്‌ണ്ട്‌. ഒരുദാഹരണം ഗുരുകുലത്തില്‌ (http://malayalam.usvishakh.net/blog/archives/313). പക്ഷെ എന്തെക്കെയായാലും ബുക്ക്‌ ആസൊദിക്കാന്‍ അതൊന്നും ഒര്‌ തടസ്സമാകണില്ല. പഴേ കൊച്ചിമുഴ്വനും കൈപിടിച്ച്‌ കൂടനടന്ന്‌ കാണിച്ച്‌തന്ന മാദവനോട്‌ കൊറച്ചൊന്നും നന്ദിപറഞ്ഞാപ്പോര. ബുദ്ദിജീവികള്‌ം നോവലിസ്റ്റ്‌കളും ഗവേശകര്‌ം സിനിമാക്കാര്‌ം കാണിച്ച്‌തന്ന കൊച്ചിയല്ല. സാദാരണക്കാരന്റ കണ്ണീക്കൂടീക്കാണണ കൊച്ചി.

    Harris Ali wrote this review Monday, April 27 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Princess

    Princess

    by Jean P. Sasson
    • Rated 2 stars

    (This comment was written on 04.06.2008)

    The criticism of a country and its culture by a native may be very pronouncedly different from that of an outsider. When a citizen finds faults with the system prevailing in his/her own country, there can be a sincere desire to see the place stripped of all that that gives it a filthy image. But an outsider may be blaming the system just for the joy of ridiculing. And it can be very cheap at times. That’s why I don’t like to believe that the book is the story dictated by the Saudi royal princess sultana to the author. The American author of this book, jean sasson claims that whatever she has written about the happenings of the Saudi royal family, the Saudi society and also the religion of Saudi Arabia are those princess sultana had divulged to her and requested to publish as a book. Therefore, even though the author is sasson, it is written as if narrated by sultana herself. According to author, sultana is only a pseudonym of the royal princess in order to conceal her identity. From between the lines, one can easily perceive that the objective of the book is not only to show that everything Saudi is wrong, but also to show that everything American is right. I prefer to believe that whatever is written in the book is solely the creation of jean sasson based upon the knowledge about Saudi life she had accumulated during her decade-long stay in Saudi and that princess sultana is just a product of her imagination. I don’t mean to say that the incidents depicted in the book about Saudi are wrong; Similar things always take place in the land of mohammed. But only the words can never be those of a Saudi person. Even a suspicion that the author might have cheated the princess by mixing her own ideas with those of the princess can’t have any grounds as according to what she claims, after releasing this book the princess requested her to continue writing her story in another book(and she indeed wrote two other sequels to this book!). the book hardly has any artistic quality. It has only found any acceptance from the readers by dwelling on controversial topics. And that seems to be her formula. Her name reminds me about some lady who finds joy in cheap gossip. Earlier when an Israeli blogger told that the book is just rubbish, I couldn’t get what he meant. But now I know. One may get some information on Saudi life and society from this book. But as a literary creation, the book seems to lack standards. When I was in Saudi, one of the bookcrossing friends had sent a copy to me, but it never reached me as it might have been confiscated by the mutawwas who censor packets that make their way to Saudi from abroad. I was feeling disappointed then for not being able to read it as it is banned in Saudi Arabia. But now that I have read it here in uae where it is freely available in bookshops without any ban, I feel more disappointed.

    Harris Ali wrote this review Thursday, April 2 2009. ( reply | view 1 replies | permalink )
  • East, west

    East, west

    by Salman Rushdie
    • Rated 3 stars

    (This comment was written on 09.05.2008)

    Rushdie the magician again. He conjures up, as usual, an all too different, fabulous world using letters. This short book is a perfect read for a lazy holiday when you would want to curl yourself up in an armchair with a cup of tea by your side. No great issues that require racking of your brains much are discussed in these stories! It is just a silly bunch of cute little stories from the east and the west and what results from the mingling of both. Who could handle such themes better than this truly grand master of a writer in exile! Very simple and artistic in its creation, rushdie reminded throughout this series of vaikom Muhammad basheer who weaves fantastic stories out of commonplace everyday happenings around him. Though some topics are those I don’t have much deep knowledge of, I still enjoyed rushdie’s playful treatment of words and ideas that has never failed to overwhelm me.

    This is a book borrowed from the lending library and to my disappointment I found two pages, namely 205 and 206 missing from it. I strongly doubt that someone might have torn it off, because page 204 ends with two ruffians with knife threatening the narrator’s mother and ayah to unbutton their blouses! Were the buttons unbuttoned? Or not? To know that one must read page 205. perhaps some previous reader who is ‘too bothered about the morality of his fellow readers’ found some unbuttoning or something similar or couldn’t contain himself from imagining something ‘outrageous’ even without any unbuttoning tore it off to save the mankind from being morally corrupt?
    Oh these people! :)

    Harris Ali wrote this review Thursday, April 2 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Great Indian Novel

    The Great Indian Novel

    by Shashi Tharoor
    • Rated 3 stars

    (This comment was written on 18.04.2008)

    This book reminded me of salman rushdie throughout its entire length, especially his book the satanic verses. They have a lot of similarities. in satanic verses, characters, places and times from various points are morphed with one another. In his book, rushdie has morphed modern India and Britain with the arabia of fourteen hundred years ago; the characters are modern day indo anglian muslims who are morphed with those from islamic history. similarly shashi tharoor in his book has morphed twentieth century british India with the great epic Mahabharata, where bhishma becomes Gandhi, karna becomes jinnah, dhritarashtra becomes Nehru and so on. But the book has failed to bring out the magic one finds in rushdie’s literature. Just the few pages at the beginning of the satanic verses describing vividly the tumbling down of people and things from the India-uk plane bostan which explodes mid air like ‘titbits of tobacco falling down from a broken old cigar’ is enough to have a taste of the quality humor that can emerge only out of rushdie’s pen which this book of hundreds of pages of tiny print tharoor has created has failed to reach anywhere near to. I remember myself literally breaking into peals of laughter while reading the book of rushdie, whereas not even a single instance of the kind happened at any point of reading this massive book by tharoor, although it is supposed to be a humorous book. To create a piece of literature applying the techniques similar to that in the satanic verses, one needs great potential. Rushdie is literally playing with words, with his characters, places and chronology. He makes the most intricate and interestingly complicated jumble of these factors. He takes his protagonists and places and time frames to diverse levels. It is all not in a single plane. And that is his greatness as a writer, whereas shahshi tharoor’s story is too hopelessly linear for a novel of such a design to be a good one. moreover, rushdie’s novel had an aura of abstractness pervading the entire plot, adding further to the wonderfulness of the book, and making it a perfect piece of art, which tharoor’s work totally lacks in.

    That said, it will be too rude to go away without telling that tharoor’s mastery of the language and his amazingly rich vocabulary and the refinement in the selection of right words are not in the least inferior to those of rushdie’s. and one more thing: I really love and admire shashi tharoor for the charming personality that he is and that love and admiration have not diminished the least due to this book.

    Harris Ali wrote this review Thursday, April 2 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • Fury
    2 of 2 members found this review helpful.

    Fury

    by Salman Rushdie
    • Rated 4 stars

    (This comment was written on 21.11.2007)

    this book is about malik solanka who has left his wife and kid and is roaming the streets of new york. It seems that, according to the author, he is filled with fury for everything around him. Not just that, the author apparently goes on to say that each and every character, nay, the entire world itself is in the grip of enormous fury. If this was the point that rushdie was trying to convey to the reader, then I guess he has failed utterly in his endeavour. I didn’t see any such inexplicable amount of fury anywhere in the book. Whatever fury was there seemed not at all enough to justify the title of the book. Perhaps it is just that the impact is not properly felt as the book is by such an author as rushdie who usually handles such emotions as fury, anger, hatred, love, attachment, nostalgia, etc. in a nihilistic way. Therefore such an author not being able to create a successful novel with such things as fury as its central theme is not a big surprise.

    intellectual judgements apart, I really enjoyed reading it. Because I never had any such expectations as a story with a proper structure from rushdie who never seemed to believe in a novel with a polished structure. Almost all of his books I have read I have enjoyed not for their theme or how he creates a well-finished novel, but just because of his magical writing style. This book also I enjoyed for the same reason. Just the experience of reading anything by rushdie, the greatest prose-stylist of our times, is in itself a reason for tremendous joy! And this book seemed very different from his other books I have read and beautiful in a cute way. And it didn’t feel boring at any point, and the pages were being flipped over at a pretty fast pace and I finished reading it in a very short time, in spite of its huge size.

    Harris Ali wrote this review Thursday, April 2 2009. ( reply | permalink )
  • A Cup of Tea
    • Rated 3 stars

    (This comment was written on 11.12.2007)

    This is the only book written by osho. In fact there are hundreds of books by osho. But they all are his speeches recorded by his disciples and later published as books. So this is the only book actually written by osho. Because this is a collection of leters written by osho to his friends. But they are more than letters. His language is so poetic. It once again emphasized my perception that the most beautiful poems are created by mystics.

    That said, the book didn’t capture my interest much. Because the major themes of his letters are love and meditation. And I have read so much of his books and so much written about him by other people that I can’t handle more love and meditation now :). Any osho book talking about these themes will be boring to some extent to me now. But that’s only a subjective thing. Otherwise the book is a real gem!

    Harris Ali wrote this review Thursday, April 2 2009. ( reply | permalink )
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