October 12, 2017
by Neelima
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Undying Dictionaries @ Link Wanderlust

In A Lexicographer’s Memoir of Merriam-Webster in the Internet Age, Adrienne Raphel explains that the business of words to the ‘hyperverbal’ connoisseur is nothing short of magical. A lexicographer at Merriam Webster could spend months on detailing the occurrences of a word as taken for granted as ‘do’. The question is has the internet made dictionaries irrelevant?

Not really, though lexicographers are fast losing their jobs.

In her book, Word by Word, Stamper calls the Internet both ‘a vast ball of wax’ and ‘a double-edged sword’. Without the physical limitations of print, the online dictionary can hold a broader lexicon as well as longer definitions.

Dictionaries like Merriam Webster are finding ways to become more edgy and hip by including active comment threads, youtube videos and trending topics.

It would be a good idea to browse this essay if you want to know more about the book Word by Word: The Secret Life of Dictionaries by Kory Stamper and to understand the scope of a dictionary in today’s digital world.

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October 10, 2017
by Neelima
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Readers can’t Digest-Week 153 (4-October to 10-Oct)

1. Nobel prize in literature 2017: Kazuo Ishiguro

2. Melania Trump book donation rejected by school librarian

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3. 2017 National Book Award finalists revealed

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4. Dolly Parton launches nursery reading programme

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Leonard Cohen’s last book, finished ‘days before his death’, due out next year

 

October 9, 2017
by Neelima
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Tamarind Trees and Vintage Bollywood @ BYOB Party in July 2017 (Part 8)

Sudharsan got a translated book that reads more like a fable- Tale of a Tamarind Tree by Sundara Ramaswamy. The story is set in a town that resembles Madurai and talks about how a town evolves around a large tamarind tree. The author has tried to convey the oral storytelling tradition, something that is now lost as are the trees around which they were told. The tamarind tree oversees everything- the people there as they play, work and grow older; it gives fruit over which people squabble and is ultimately cut down so that a park can be built instead. If Tamil literature interests you and you want to know more about this story, this review is a good one, though there will be spoilers!

Carrying on with the theme of Indian literature, Sunny surmised that he preferred this time to dabble in a book from India, a Hindi book called Godan by Premchand. Anyone who knows Hindi is familiar with Premchand as he is still the most popular writer in this language even though his work is quite dated. The story is what can be described as Bollywoodesque and vintage 70s. The characters have no gray and are definitely good or bad. There is no middle class as such, only the zamindar, landlord, and his fiefdom. Hori Mahato is a farmer. He is married and has two daughters and a son. The story revolves around Hori’s desire to own a cow and the problems that ensue. Other works written by Premchand were mentioned including Mazdoor and Nirmala.

Many books in regional languages including those by the renowned Perumal Murugan focus on the social problems that exist in village communities. Abhaya mentioned an English book in this context called Nectar in the Sieve by Kamala Markandaya. The story is based on a child bride who must deal with the travesties of drought and monsoon, the realities of any agrarian tragedy. Abhaya also mentioned Neem Ka Ped, a long-ago Indian television drama-series written by famous writer Dr. Rahi Masoom Raza where feudal hierarchy was depicted in pre- and post independent India. Have you seen it?

And with that, we come to the end of the BYOB Party in July 2017. Such a long list of book recommendations! What are you reading?

 

October 5, 2017
by Neelima
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Note-taking @ Link Wanderlust

The technology of note-taking is pretty extensive, what with tablets, laptops and smart pens. Bradford Morrow, however, doesn’t think that digital note-taking will replace the physical journal. Many writers use the notebook or paper napkins to write on the go. Morrow talks about he uses the journal as a tool to understand more about the theme that he is working on for a novel. It is beautiful to read how he carries his notebook around and sketches in it, takes notes and tapes any pictures of note. Incidentally, I read another article about how the lyrical writer Michael Ondaatje has created such notebooks which have been the inspiration behind his marvelous books.

If you are writing a novel, you could use this idea to fashion your research. Read this story.

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October 3, 2017
by Neelima
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Readers can’t Digest-Week 152 (27-Sep to 3-Oct)

1. Canada’s $75,000 Cundill Prize Longlist: Historical Takes on Contemporary Issues

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2. End of the postcard as country’s oldest publisher closes due to rise of selfies 

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3. The DSC PRIZE 2017 announces shortlist of five novels

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4. The National Poetry Library launching a project to collect poetry in endangered languages

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5. HAWRAF has designed a new platform for reading books online

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October 2, 2017
by Neelima
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Monsoon, Moses and Sleepwalking @ BYOB Party in July 2017 (Part 7)

The story of how Piya came upon Alexander Frater’s Chasing the Monsoon: A Modern Pilgrimage Through India is interesting. She and her friends had an informal book get-together and they organized a book box, where a book and things associated with it are shared. Since monsoon is in the air, Piya bought the book with the hope that the petrichor effect would bring on the rains.  This is a book we featured in our Monsoon related books infographic and that one of our guests at a previous book party had talked about.

Piya enjoyed Frater’s narration. As a boy, rain has been his friend. Having grown up in the Polynesian Islands, this British writer settled in Australia was coaxed by an Indian couple to witness the monsoon journey and so he left for Cochin and ended his journey in Cherrapunji. Frater speaks not just about the scientific story of low-pressure areas and storms; he talks about the way the weather affects the people who get trapped in waterlogged areas and floods. He talks about traveling in absurd weather conditions to catch a train and of almost dying in a monsoon storm in Assam. He talks about how he negotiated through red tape to get a permit to visit Cherrapunji, considered the wettest place on earth at one time. While in school, the weather is taught in a dry and factual manner, it’s the human interest angle that livens up the book and makes the book a must-read even for children.

Ashmita spoke about a not so well-known book called The Moses Legacy. She found it remarkably similar to Dan Brown’s work and while Brown’s fact and fiction merge into a delicious blur, Adam Palmer separates the fact from the fiction and takes the reader on a nail-biting journey. Daniel Klein is a protagonist that readers identify with and the Egyptian setting adds to the mystery of the story. Following the thread of writers with similar works, mention was made of Harry Potter, a manga and even Books of Magic by Neil Gaiman.

Siddharth had a unique reason for visiting the BYOB Party. “I’m intrigued by readers,” he said. His book choice was everyone’s favorite – Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner, a story of friendship and betrayal, with Afghanistan as the backdrop. Siddharth read out a gem from the book:

“There is only one sin, only one. And that is theft. Every other sin is a variation of theft. When you kill a man, you steal a life… you steal his wife’s right to a husband, rob his children of a father. When you tell a lie, you steal someone’s right to the truth. When you cheat, you steal the right to fairness… there is no act more wretched than stealing.”

Dhwani talked about The Sleepwalker’s Guide to Dancing: A Novel by Mira Jacob. Named one the best books of 2014 with writing compared to that of Jhumpa Lahiri, this sprawling family saga is a diaspora story. As it is in many Indian families, mental health issues are swept under the carpet and Jacob writes about an unfolding of difficult truths. What Dhwani found appealing was the humor that made an otherwise difficult theme a fun read.

More books in Part 8.

September 28, 2017
by Neelima
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Poetry Sleuths and Rewriting @ Link Wanderlust

One would think that plagiarism is something that people who are unsure of their poetic abilities do. But in the essay ‘Plagiarists never do it once’: meet the sleuth tracking down the poetry cheats we learn that plagiarism is something of a profession that some poets take up.

“It led to a Canadian government web page where a poem had been chosen to honour the memory of Pierre DesRuisseaux, Canada’s fourth parliamentary poet laureate, who died in early 2016. The poem, it said, had been translated from DesRuisseaux’s French original. Lightman read the opening lines: “You can wipe me from the pages of history/with your twisted falsehoods/you can drag me through the mud/but like the wind, I rise.” The poem was called I Rise. Next, Lightman looked up the Maya Angelou. “You may write me down in history/With your bitter, twisted lies/You may trod me in the very dirt/But still, like dust, I’ll rise.” The poem was called Still I Rise.”

Maya Angelou wasn’t the only one this poet seemed to have hacked and it took a poetry sleuth like Ira Lightman to uncover the crime. Lightman behaves like a journalist looking for patterns. He also faces much flak for his fault-finding enthusiasm. Read more about the journey of this poetry sleuth.

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While for some, plagiarism is a possible career choice, for others, and that includes the larger number of struggling writers, it’s rewriting. Thomas E. Ricks had written a couple of books already which was why he was surprised when his manuscript that was the result of heavy research received an unforthcoming response. But instead of being completely crushed beyond no return, he took the criticism with an open mind and began to reconstruct his novel very much like a carpenter stripping down an old house and building a new one.
Read The Book he wasn’t Supposed to Write and understand that the first draft or what you end up showing the editor is just the beginning of a long journey. A good editor can save the manuscript and leave you with happier readers.

September 26, 2017
by Neelima
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Readers can’t Digest-Week 151 (20-Sep to 26-Sep)

1. Gender debunking book is 30th winner of the Royal Society science book of the year

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2. Shonda Rhimes Is Launching a Digital Publishing Platform With Hearst

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3. YouTube star Hank Green will publish his first novel next year

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4. Wizards of the Coast to Launch Dungeons & Dragons eBook App

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5. Inkitt, a ‘reader powered’ book publisher, raises $3.9M to discover the next best-selling author

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