May 16, 2017
by Neelima
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Readers can’t Digest-Week 133 (10-May to 16-May)

1.Dylan Thomas prize goes to Australian ‘genius’ Fiona McFarlane

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2.Francis Spufford wins the Ondaatje prize with Golden Hill

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3.BBC doctor Chatterjee wins book deal after six-way auction

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4.Milo Yiannopoulos to Sue Simon & Schuster, Self-Publish Memoir

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5.Andy Weir is publishing a new crime book set on the moon

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May 15, 2017
by Neelima
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Seeds of Disaster and Lords of Finance @ BYOB Party in April 2017 (Part 2)

Ralph found yet another academic book called Seeds of Disaster, Roots of Response: How Private Action Can Reduce Public Vulnerability edited by Philip E. Auerswald. The book is the first systematic attempt to make sense of how private leadership can provide critical services during bad times. The book stresses the importance of both the public and private sectors joining hands as a prerequisite to accountability in society. The book presents multiple perspectives and draws on experts from various disciplines. Ralph drew on his observations of crises in India and the fallacy of resilience as a tool to mitigate disaster.

One book Mandar was particularly inspired by was Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World by Liaquat Ahamed, a writer of Pakistani origin. The book was shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Prize in 2009. The book delves into the economic recession of the 1930s that led to WWII. He speaks of the four central bankers of the premier banks of the world who mismanaged the crises since the 1920s which ultimately led to the Great Depression. He also mentions how John Maynard Keynes’ economic predictions were conveniently ignored for the sake of short-term interests. Mandar mused about how there are many lessons in this book for dealing with the current economic crises, though as is usually the case, history tends to repeat itself. Mandar read out an interesting passage from the book about remonetization:

“The task of keeping Germany adequately supplied with currency notes became a major logistical operation involving ‘133 printing works with 1783 machines . . . and more than 30 paper mills.’  By 1923, the inflation had acquired a momentum of its own, creating an ever-accelerating appetite for currency that the Reichsbank, even after conscripting private printers, could not meet. In a country already flooded with paper, there were even complaints of a shortage of money in municipalities, so towns and private companies began to print their own notes. Over the next few months, Germany ex-perienced the single greatest destruction of monetary value in human history. By August 1923, a dollar was worth 620,000 marks and by early November 1923, 630 billion.

Basic necessities were now priced in the billions—a kilo of butter cost 250 billion; a kilo of bacon 180 billion; a simple ride on a Berlin street car, which had cost 1 mark before the war, was now set at 15 billion. Even though currency notes were available in denominations of up to 100 billion marks, it took whole sheaves to pay for anything. The country was awash with currency notes, carried around in bags, in wheelbarrows, in laundry baskets and hampers, even in baby carriages.”

Ralph mentioned another financial story called Fault Line: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy by Raghuram Rajan (Governor of the Reserve Bank of India between September 2013 and September 2016) who warned about the impending financial crises before it occurred. Raghuram exposed not just the central bankers but the chinks in the economy and spending habits that could lead to such crises. This is the first time that we have had such an extensive discussion of financial books at the BYOB Party and it opened up the need to understand the economy better. A sick economy once nurtured Nazism and could only be cured by the ensuing destruction of a World War and now the financial crises that plague the world reflect directly in a realpolitik and the rise of populism world over. Food for thought.

More books in Part 3.

 

May 11, 2017
by Neelima
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Project Ocean and the Books in your Head @ Link Wanderlust

What would happen if every single book on earth was accessible on a single website? It almost happened.

The Google Books Project codenamed Project Ocean was an ambitious one.  It would give you access to the full text of everything ever written. And you would not just be able to read them but search and copy paste them. But the universal library is not to be. A legal agreement that would have changed the fate of books was rejected by the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York.

“In August 2010, Google put out a blog post announcing that there were 129,864,880 books in the world. The company said they were going to scan them all.

Of course, it didn’t quite turn out that way. This particular moonshot fell about a hundred-million books short of the moon. What happened was complicated but how it started was simple: Google did that thing where you ask for forgiveness rather than permission, and forgiveness was not forthcoming. Upon hearing that Google was taking millions of books out of libraries, scanning them, and returning them as if nothing had happened, authors and publishers filed suit against the company, alleging, as the authors put it simply in their initial complaint, ‘massive copyright infringement.’ “

To know more about the Authors Guild v. Google fiasco, read Torching the Modern-Day Library of Alexandria by James Somers.

Books, Door, Entrance, Italy, Colors, City, Scenography

Science facilitates ideas like these. Take another one- what if you upload a book to your brain, what then? While Google has in its database millions of books that cannot be read, another idea by futurists suggests that our brains ‘might someday interface directly with non-biological forms of intelligence, possibly with the help of nano-bots that travel through our capillaries.’

This means you longer have to read War and Peace. Besides the copyright issues involved if books can be uploaded to your brain, another issue the author talks about is relevance. What would a book like The Brothers Karamazov mean if was in your brain already. Part of the beauty of a book comes from rereading it at different times in your life so that new meanings come forth.

Read the story What If We Could Upload Books to Our Brains? by Cathy O’Neil.

 

 

 

 

 

May 8, 2017
by Neelima
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Hindi Poetry and Dialogs with God @ BYOB Party in April 2017 (Part 1)

The session kicked off with a Hindi poetry book, Kuchh Ishq Kiya Kuchh Kaam Kiya, by Piyush Mishra, an Indian film and theater actor, music director, lyricist, singer, scriptwriter. Being a part of Bollywood, his writing is popular, Jay observed. It is very difficult otherwise for an unknown writer of poetry to be read and enjoyed. Since Mishra is one who has seen life in all its facets, his writing is informed by experience and the contemporary life. His style is to the point and devoid of unnecessary frills. Ari read out a couple of poems and the BYOB party took on an air of lyricism.

Archana spoke about a series that she was impressed by for its therapeutic and cathartic value- Conversations with God, a sequence of books, running up to three-thousand pages, written by Neale Donald Walsch where Walsch asks questions and God answers. Walsch wrote the book during a low period in his life when he was looking for answers.The first book published in 1995 became a publishing phenomenon, staying on the New York Times Best-Sellers List for 135 weeks.

Here is an interview with the author in case you want to listen to some words of wisdom from a spiritual messenger, where he talks about fundamental spiritual questions: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwH8LOkugzE.

Abhaya mentioned that Muhammad Iqbal, a celebrated Urdu poet, has written two controversial books in a similar vein (this is much earlier, some time before the 1920s) called Shikwa and Jawab-e-Shikwa. While the first part of the book addresses questions to God and attracted much ire from Muslim scholars, the second part was welcomed and praised.

More books in Part 2.

May 4, 2017
by Neelima
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Black History of Dumas and Pushkin @ Link Wanderlust

Nadar - Alexander Dumas père (1802-1870) - Google Art Project 2.jpgIt is a little known fact that Alexandre Dumas’s father was a military hero and not white skinned but of Haitian origin. This story is even more relevant during a presidential race in France where race and origin matter.

“Many of the adventures described in The Three Musketeers and The Count of Monte Cristo are believed to be based on his father’s experiences.  Yet few who read his books are aware that Alexandre Dumas was the grandson of a Haitian slave. Fewer still realise that his remarkable parent, born into slavery but raised and educated in France by a white aristocratic father, grew up to challenge Napoleon Bonaparte and become one of the most celebrated military heroes of his day.”

Thomas Alexandre had the opportunity to study and succeed. The revolution freed him from slavery and he even married a white woman and was promoted to the post of general. His exploits earned him the nickname Black Devil and he even came in confrontation with Napolean Bonaparte who wished to reestablish slavery. Alexandre has never been given his due ever since. Racism  can not be dismissed as some kind of primitive boorishness. It exists in France and stories like What the legacy of France’s first black general tells us about the country’s identity can change the way young people make judgements on the basis of the skin color.

Portrait of Alexander Pushkin (Orest Kiprensky, 1827).PNGI stumbled on another race related story about the revered Russian writer Alexander Pushkin.

The legend, in French and Russian, declared that Abram Petrovich Gannibal (Hanibal in French), born in LogoneBirni in 1696 and deceased in Russia in 1781, chief military engineer and general-in-chief of the Imperial Russian Army, was a graduate of the royal artillery academy of La Fère.

It also noted that he was the great-grandfather of Russia’s greatest poet, Alexander Pushkin.

Pushkin was proud of his descent and he even used Gannibal as a model for an unfinished novel. Gannibal was apparently kidnapped when he was just seven and presented as a gift to the Ottoman sultan in Constantinople. The boy finally ended up being sent to Czar Peter I. Read more here: Of African Princes and Russian Poets

 

April 27, 2017
by Neelima
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Writing in a Time of Numbness @ Link Wanderlust

If you have read Siddhartha Mukherjee’s books, you will be familiar with his lyrical prose and his ability to talk about complicated realities like disease and death in a way that sustains interest rather than chases you away. Disease is like that; it frightens and where understanding is necessary, you are most often faced with pure ignorance and fear.

In this delightful essay (actually a keynote address given to the recipients of the 2017 Whiting Awards for emerging writers), Love in the time of Numbness; or Dr. Chekov. writer, Mukherjee speaks about writing in numbing times as these. He can speak about numbing times with ease as most often a dedicated oncologist faces many tragedies that he can only try to avert. As it is with beautifully written essays, he begins his story at a personal level and then meanders to another writer who faced the same problem of desensitization. Chekhov.

He travelled deliberately to Sakhalin Island, a penal colony, to overcome the numbness that his profession as a doctor had left him in.

“Six principles that make for a good story,” Chekhov would later write, “are: 1. Absence of lengthy verbiage of a political-social-economic nature; 2. total objectivity; 3. truthful descriptions of persons and objects; 4. extreme brevity; 5. audacity and originality . . . and; 6. compassion.”

It was compassion that led the writer to uglier climes and his writing reflects the lessons he learnt.