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Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

Monday, July 18, 2011

Backward journey

Focus, Sam
By Rohit Gore.
Rupa.
Pages 248. Rs 195.
Reviewed by Ravia Gupta (The Tribune)
ACCIDENTS are part of life. While some accidents are serious in nature, there are some that bring a smile on your face each time you remember them. We all do have accidents in life, but there is something unique in case of Sam as he meets with an accident every year. There is something strange about his 28th accident, as he considers it to be the worst ever accident. This time something evil tells him how he will feel on his 29th accident.

Focus, Sam is a journey of Sam or Sameer Sathe to save himself from the next accident, of which a mystic had warned him that it would be his last accident. The only way he can save himself is by reconnecting with all the girls in his life. Now the biggest question buzzing in his head is, whether the seven women on his list will consider saving his life? Do they still feel that it is worth the effort to save his life despite the hurt and broken promises?
Desperate to save his life, Sam decides to go back in time to repair the damage caused. In his attempt to understand their lives and himself better, he finds out that he did fall in love with each one of them, may be not for a long, but there was something special for each one of them in his heart. To his disappointment, he also finds that most of them were not really in love with him.
This reverse journey becomes quite a learning experience for Sam who now understands the real meaning of life to the fullest and his responsibilities towards life become clear to him. Rohit Gore in his debut novel has sketched some of the characters so well that they almost seem real people with real problems. And you can be sure to learn something new from Sam’s backward journey to step ahead in life.
Source: http://www.tribuneindia.com/2011/20110717/spectrum/book4.htm

Saturday, April 23, 2011

Breaking free from virtues

Reviewed by Ravia Gupta...published in The Tribune  
Vivek and I
By Mayur Patel. Penguin. Pages 384. Rs 299.
"Love pains. Love kills. Love heals.
For some it’s an addiction and for many it’s rubbish. Who are we to decide, it’s for those who fall in love each time to brave the ache next time."
Vivek and IBEING ambitious may not be the purpose of everyone’s life, but adding a "meaning to their lives" is certainly everyone’s aim. This is a story of a man whose aims in life were limited. Having a large bank balance and owning luxurious things had never been his idea of a successful life. Family, friends and love mattered to him the most.
Kaushik, while watching himself in a mirror, was proud to be a handsome man. Fair, tall, slim, sharp features, he almost had everything needed to be a "Lady Killer". But like they say the world would have been a perfect place if we all were happy with what we had. Kaushik, too, was not very happy to be a "lady killer" and was in search of a different meaning to his life.
The past is a history and history repeats itself are often confusing to understand. Brokenhearted Kaushik when arrives in a small, sleepy town of Valai, leaving his past behind, he had no idea that he would ever fall in love again. But life gives him another chance and the rush of love that he feels the second time is, however, not without its dilemmas. Kaushik finds himself in a fix between the "right" and the "wrong" in society. He is just not sure if his "love" would be "man enough" to face the truth.
Girls had always been crazy about Kaushik, but he was never interested in them. Oblivious to the devastation, he was interested in men and the latest one he was crazy about was Vivek, a 16-year-old boy, from the school where he was a teacher.
Vivek, an arts student, was not a topper, but he was above average. He was good at maths and so-so in English, the subject which Kaushik used to teach. Kaushik firmly believed that love had nothing to do with age. This notion perhaps unshackled him from the guilt of falling in love with his student. He believed that love for Vivek stabilised his unsteady boat of life. His life had found its meaning. The faint hope of getting Vivek’s love had brought new zest to his life.
Life taught Kaushik a lot after his separation from Krishna. Though he was not ready to face the suffering again, he was helpless and was on the same track of love and hope with Vivek once again.
Despite being on the "wrong path" as his so-called modern family considered homosexuality to be a sin, Kaushik just didn’t want to mend his ways. Falling in love with Vivek was one such error which he didn’t want to correct. Kaushik was neck deep in love with Vivek and was ready for whatever destiny the Master above had in store for him.
Vivek and I is a powerful novel about sexuality, falling in love, and then learning to let go. With more authors choosing homosexual themes for their work, a same-sex story no longer remains a taboo for Indian writers. Mayur Patel’s Vivek and I is yet another novel trying to break-free from all the "sanity".