Thursday, October 25, 2018

Importance of Mental Health - #01 'The Self Care'

Importance of Mental Health - #01


The Self Care


Treat yourself like you treat your dog (Assuming you`re not some animal-abusing psycho)

People appear to love their dogs, cats, and birds more than themselves.
But they don't know how to take care of themselves.
How horrible is that? How much shame must exist, for something like that to be true?
So treat yourself like you treat your dog.

Sunday, September 23, 2018

Book Review #15 - Kabuliwala by Rabindranath Tagore


Kabuliwala by Rabindranath TagoreMy rating: 4 of 5 stars



Review


We Owe to the People Who Loved Us in Childhood. When a child/toddler befriends you but forgets who you are during your next meet then that's worse than a breakup.

Quotes From The Book:


Article about Kabuliwala's now:
Article: 125 years of Tagore’s Kabuliwala: Here’s what life is like for the community today

https://www.hindustantimes.com/india-news/in-search-of-tagore-s-kabuliwala/story-JgtSdmfJp0PKKVokebwYwN.html

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Book Review #14 - Mathilgal by Vaikom Muhammad Basheer



Mathilgal
by Vaikom Muhammad BasheerMy rating: 4 of 5 stars



About the Book:

Mathilukal (Wall) is about the author himself and his never met love. both are imprisoned and separated by a huge wall that divides their prisons.

Got to know about this ace Malayalam writer and purchased three of his books that was translated in Tamil by காலச்சுவடு Kaalachuvadu publications. 'Balyakalasakhi', 'Mathilukal' and 'Enga Uppuppavukku Oru Aana Irunthathu'



Quotes From The Book:


Basheer says ” I’m the garden, I’m the flower” What about the fruit? Yes I'm the fruit too!



Movie Version of Mathilukal (Malayalam):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GRwGYHd-yJ4



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Book Review #13 - Balyakalasakhi by Vaikom Muhammad Basheer


ബാല്യകാലസഖി | Balyakalasakhi by Vaikom Muhammad BasheerMy rating: 4 of 5 stars


About the Book:

Balyakalasakhi (Childhood Friend) is a romantic tragedy novel. The story revolves around Majeed and Suhra, who are in love from childhood.

Got to know about this ace Malayalam writer and purchased three of his books that was translated in Tamil by காலச்சுவடு Kaalachuvadu publications. 'Balyakalasakhi', 'Mathilukal' and 'Enga Uppuppavukku Oru Aana Irunthathu'

Movie Version of Balyakalasakhi (Malayalam):

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9Smu...

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Friday, September 21, 2018

Book Review #12 - யானை டாக்டர் [Yaanai Doctor] by Jeyamohan

யானை டாக்டர் [Yaanai Doctor]

யானை டாக்டர் [Yaanai Doctor] by JeyamohanMy rating: 5 of 5 stars


About the Book:

Yaanai Doctor (Elephant Doctor) from writer Jeyamohan is a must read short account of a real-life veteran veterinarian doctor who is an Elephant expert.
The story is narrated by a colleague who works closely with Dr K who gets instantly admired and later trying his best to get the deserved recognition for the Elephant Doctor.

Review:

The reader can easily connect with the narrator and visualize the beauty of wildlife and see how inspirational Dr K is. This short read will make you go to nature and communicate with it.

About Doctor K:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/V._Kris...

About the author:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/B._Jeya...

Free Audio Book Version of this book:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=la53H...

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Thursday, September 20, 2018

Book Review #11 - ''Murder on the Orient Express'' by Agatha Christie



Murder on the Orient Express by Agatha Christie My rating: 4 of 5 stars



Review:

This was my first Agatha Christie novel. I was not expecting that Connections & ending, which was the best thing in a murder mystery story.

Spoiler:

The Number Twelve

"I remembered a remark of Colonel Arbuthnot's about trial by jury. A jury is composed of twelve people – there were twelve passengers – Ratchett was stabbed twelve times." (3.9.58)
The number links a many and what an ending!

Quote From The Book:

“The impossible could not have happened, therefore the impossible must be possible in spite of appearances.”

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Thursday, September 13, 2018

Instagram Post: Hanging bell in the temple

Instagram Post: Hanging bell in the temple


Hanging bell in the temple. A Belief: When bells ring, it creates a vibration in the atmosphere, which spreads too far with the flow of winds. All the insects and particles coming across this vibration get killed, and the atmosphere becomes clean and healthy


Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Book Review #10 - Nylon Rope by Sujatha Rangarajan

Nylon Rope

Nylon Rope by Sujatha RangarajanMy rating: 4 of 5 stars



Nylon Rope is a whodunit by ace writer Sujatha Rangarajan published in the year 1971 (His first novel).

Within 115 pages the writer has given a good crime thriller which still gives a crisp read and keeps us engaged even after these many years.

Lookout for the pages that appears in random pages in the middle of the novel containing handwritten letters of a character that makes you feel irrelevant to where the story is going but see later how the knots are tied to Sujatha's signature ending.

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Tuesday, July 3, 2018

நீங்கள் பார்க்காத சுவர்கள்

நீங்கள் பார்க்காத சுவர்கள்



நீங்கள் பேச விரும்பாத பக்கங்களை நான் அசை போட்டுக்கொண்டிருக்கிறேன்.

நீங்கள் நினைக்க இயலாத பக்கங்கள் எனக்கு பரிச்சயமான பக்கங்களாய் இருக்கிறது.

நீங்கள் கடந்து சென்ற சாதாரண நிகழ்வு எனக்கு கூர்ந்து பார்க்க விஷயங்களை தரும் பெரு நிகழ்வு.

நீங்கள் உங்களுடைய நண்பனுடன் கழித்த நாட்களெல்லாம் பின்பு மரக்கக்கூடும்.
எனக்கு அவைகள் தான் நட்பை நினைவில் அசைபோட்டு  பாதுகாக்கும் கருவி.

Thursday, April 19, 2018

Book Review #09 - 'Ghachar Ghochar' by Vivek Shanbhag



Ghachar Ghochar means tangled beyond repair.

Review:

Unsettling, Often claustrophobic!
This novel looks intimately at a middle-class family living in Bengaluru, at how their new-found fortune becomes more of a cruel joke played upon them, unleashing the beast within. It changes family equations, robs them of their moral fortitude and peace of mind.
The author often refers some minute details that are easy to relate to any middle-class south Indian
which may be nostalgic at times and Déjà vu the other times but you will never want to go through where the story later progresses and ends.


Quotes From The Book:

“it’s not we who control money, it’s the money that controls us. When there’s only a little, it behaves meekly; when it grows, it becomes brash and has its way with us.”

“On that day I became convinced that it is the words of women that deeply wound other women.”

“Words, after all, are nothing by themselves. They burst into meaning only in the minds they’ve entered.”

Spoiler:

The Essence of the story:

After a moment of particular crisis in the family: “Amma and Malati noticed Anita’s dissent. It’s an unwritten rule that all members come to the family’s aid when it is threatened. Anita had broken that rule. She should not have.” Anita is the narrator’s wife, an “outsider” to the family and, as the rather threatening “she should not have” indicates, a potential “ant” that may need to be quashed.

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